This pull request brings us up to fmt 11.1.4 and enables `FMT_PEDANTIC`.
`FMT_PEDANTIC` turns on `/W3`, which is required by our local feudal
lords who will automatically file bugs on us if we don't build with
enough warnings enabled.
PR adds a WinGet configuration file to install the necessary
dependencies in order to build terminal locally. The configuration file
enables developer mode, installs PowerShell 7, Visual Studio 2022 & all
the required workloads from the .vsconfig file (in accordance with
the dependencies listed in the README).
## Validation Steps Performed
Tested the configuration file by spinning up a clean Win11 Pro VM in
azure and then doing the following:
1. Install latest WinGet on the VM using WinGet sandbox script.
Install git and clone the repo
2. Run `winget configure .config/configuration.winget` (this should work
by just double-clicking the file in explorer too)
3. After the configuration is completed, open the solution in the now
installed Visual Studio and build. The build is successful and I could
start terminal with F5
Co-authored-by: Demitrius Nelon <denelon@microsoft.com>
After taking in 1.22, our CodeQL process caught a few locations where we
weren't following the right guidance:
- Performing integer comparisons of different sizes which could lead to
an infinite loop if the larger integer goes out of range of the smaller
integer
- Not checking HResult of a called method
Co-authored-by: aphistra <102989060+aphistra@users.noreply.github.com>
Allow users to preview color schemes by hovering over them with the
mouse pointer in the Command Palette.
- This PR handles issue #18238.
- This extends the previously closed issue #6689, which allowed the `UP`
and `DOWN` arrows to trigger a preview of color schemes in the Command
Palette.
This works by attaching event handlers for `PointerEntered` and
`PointerExited` to `ListViewItem` containers. When the mouse pointer
moves into the item's bounding area, the `PreviewAction` handler is
triggered to showcase the hovered color scheme. Conversely, when the
mouse pointer leaves the item's area, the `PreviewAction` is executed on
the selected item (generally from the `UP` and `DOWN` arrows).
**Important note:**
- This also provides previews for the other features that the
`ActionPreviewHandler` handles, such as the background opacity of the
terminal.
## Validation Steps Performed
- Hover a color scheme, and it becomes the active one.
- Pressing `ESC` at any point to dismiss the command palette, and the
scheme returns to the previous one.
- I did not add any additional test, though all existing ColorScheme
tests passed.
Closes#18238
I found multiple issues while investigating this:
* Render thread shutdown is racy, because it doesn't actually stop the
render thread.
* Lifetime management in `ControlCore` failed to account for the
circular dependency of render thread --> renderer --> render data -->
terminal --> renderer --> render thread. Fixed by reordering the
`ControlCore` members to ensure their correct destruction.
* Ensured that the connection setter calls close on the previous
connection.
(Hopefully) Closes#18598
## Validation Steps Performed
* Can't repro the original failure ❌
* Opening and closing tabs as fast as possible doesn't crash anymore ✅
* Detaching and reattaching a tab producing continuous output ✅
It turns out that we *can* support language overrides--fairly easily, in
fact!--by simply changing the default Language qualifier.
I elected not to change how packaged language override works until we
are certain this works properly everywhere. Consider it a healthy
distrust of the Windows App Platform.
Closes#18419Closes#18336Closes#17619
Since `WaitForDA1` would wait until `_deviceAttributes` is non-zero,
we must ensure it's actually non-zero at the end of this handler,
even if there are no parameters.
## Validation Steps Performed
* Mod the Terminal DA1 to be `\x1b[?6c`. No hang ✅
* Mod the Terminal DA1 to be `\x1b[?61c`. No hang ✅
I've received a dump from an affected user, and it showed that the
layout event in TerminalPage was raised synchronously. This meant that
during page initialization, the handoff listener was started while still
being stuck inside the handoff listener. This resulted in a deadlock.
This PR fixes the issue by not holding the lock across handoff callback
calls.
Closes#18634
## Validation Steps Performed
* Can't repro ❌
This can be considered "part 1" of fixing #18599: It prevents crashes
(due to unhandled exceptions) by ensuring we only create 1 content
dialog across all windows at a time. Sounds bad, but I tried it and it's
not actually _that_ bad in practice (it's still really gross though).
The bad news is that I don't have a "part 2", because I can't figure out
what's going on:
* Create 2 windows
* Open the About dialog in window 1
and right click the text
* Close the About dialog
* Open the About dialog in window 2
and right click the text
* WinUI will simply toss the focus to window 1
It appears as if context menus are permanently associated with the first
window that uses them. It has nothing to do with whether a ContentDialog
instance is reused (I tested that).
## Validation Steps Performed
* Open 2 windows with 2 tabs each
* Attempt to close window 1, dialog appears ✅
* Attempt to close window 2, dialog moves to window 2 ✅
The logic didn't work when persistence was enabled and you had 2 windows
and closed the 2nd one, or when dragging the last tab out of the only
window.
## Validation Steps Performed
* 2 windows, close the 2nd one, app doesn't exit ✅
* 1 window, 1 tab, drag the tab out of the window, app doesn't exit ✅
I don't actually know why this is happening, because it doesn't
happen with startup actions specified in the settings file.
In any case, it's fixed with more delays.
Closes#18572
## Validation Steps Performed
* Create a tab with 2 panes
* Tear it off into a new window
* New window has 1 tab with 2 panes ✅
Missed a few `_getTerminalPosition()` on the first run. Disabled
rounding for pointer movements and mouse wheel events (which are used
for hyperlink hover detection and vt mouse mode). The only time we round
now is...
- `SetEndSelectionPoint()` --> because we're updating a selection
- `ControlCore->LeftClickOnTerminal()` --> where all paths are used for
selection*
*the only path that doesn't is `RepositionCursorWithMouse` being
enabled, which also makes sense based on clicking around Notepad with a
large font size.
## References and Relevant Issues
Follow-up for #18486Closes#18595
## Validation Steps Performed
In large font size, play around with midnight commander and hover over
hyperlink edges.
* `_ApplyLanguageSettingChange` calls `PrimaryLanguageOverride`
(the WinRT API function) and we would call it every time a new
window is created. Now it's only called on settings load.
* `_RegisterTabEvents` would listen for "Content" changes which can
be null. `IVector::Append` throws if a null object is given.
In our case, it's null if the content got erased with nothing.
Additionally, this fixes a bug where we wouldn't call
`_ProcessLazySettingsChanges` on startup. This is important if the
settings file was changed while Windows Terminal wasn't running.
Lastly, there's a lifetime fix in this PR, which is a one-line change
and I didn't want to make a separate PR for that.
When the server handle gets closed on conhost (= terminal is gone),
and e.g. PowerShell is used, we would previously log 6 error messages.
This PR reduces it to zero, by removing the 3 biggest offenders.
## Summary of the Pull Request
There's already logic to tab to a hyperlink when we're in mark mode. We
do this by looking at the automatically detected hyperlinks and finding
the next one of interest. This adds an extra step afterwards to find any
embedded hyperlinks and tab to them too.
Since embedded hyperlinks are stored as text attributes, we need to
iterate through the buffer to find the hyperlink and it's buffer
boundaries. This PR tries to reduce the workload of that by first
finding the automatically detected hyperlinks (since that's a fairly
quick process), then using the reduced search area to find the embedded
hyperlink (if one exists).
## Validation Steps Performed
In PowerShell, add an embedded hyperlink as such:
```powershell
${ESC}=[char]27
Write-Host "${ESC}]8;;https://github.com/microsoft/terminal${ESC}\This is a link!${ESC}]8;;${ESC}\"
```
Enter mark mode (ctrl+shift+m) then shift+tab to it.
✅ The "This is a link!" is selected
✅ Verified that this works when searching forwards and backwards
Closes#18310Closes#15194
Follow-up from #13405
OSC 8 support added in #7251
WinUI asynchronously updates its tab view items, so it may happen that
we're given a `TabViewItem` that still contains a `TabBase` which has
actually already been removed. Regressed in #15924.
Closes#18581
## Validation Steps Performed
* Close tabs rapidly with middle click
* No crash ✅
This is a theoretical fix for #18584 as I cannot reproduce the issue
anymore. It did happen briefly on one of my devices though, and at the
time I observed that it would persist a window with no startup actions.
Found this one completely randomly.
## Validation Steps Performed
* Open 2 windows with 1 tab each
* Click the X button on the tab in the 1st window
* OpenConsole/etc. is cleaned up ✅
---------
Co-authored-by: Dustin L. Howett <duhowett@microsoft.com>
During startup we relinquish ownership of the console lock to wait for
the DA1 response of the hosting terminal. The problem occurs if the
hosting terminal disconnects during that time. The broken pipe will
cause `VtIo` to send out `CTRL_CLOSE_EVENT` messages, but those won't
achieve anything, because the first and only client hasn't even finished
connecting yet. What we need to do instead is to return an error code.
In order to not use a bunch of booleans to control this behavior, I gave
`VtIo` a state enum. This however required restructuring the calling
code in order to not have a dozen states.
## Validation Steps Performed
* Launch cmd.exe with ConPTY
* ...but leave the stdin pipe unbound (which will hang the DA1 request)
* Immediately kill the ConPTY session
* cmd.exe exits after clicking away the error message ✅
Before we had a Settings UI, we added support for a setting called
`startOnUserLogin`. It was a boolean, and on startup we would try to
yeet the value of that setting into the Windows API responsible for
registering us as a startup task.
Unfortunately, we failed to take into account a few things.
- Startup tasks can be independently controlled by the user in Windows
Settings or by an enterprise using enterprise policy
- This control is not limited to *disabling* the task; it also supports
enabling it!
Users could enable our startup task outside the settings file and we
would never know it. We would load up, see that `startOnUserLogin` was
`false`, and go disable the task again. 🤦
Conversely, if the user disables our task outside the app _we can never
enable it from inside the app._ If an enterprise has configured it
either direction, we can't change it either.
The best way forward is to remove it from our settings model and only
ever interact with the Windows API.
This pull request replaces `startOnUserLogin` with a rich settings
experience that will reflect the current and final state of the task as
configured through Windows. Terminal will enable it if it can and
display a message if it can't.
My first attempt at this PR (which you can read in the commit history)
made us try harder to sync the state between the settings model and the
OS; we would propagate the disabled state back to the user setting when
the task was disabled in the OS or if we failed to enable it when the
user asked for it. That was fragile and didn't support reporting the
state in the settings UI, and it seems like it would be confusing for a
setting to silently turn itself back off anyway...
Closes#12564
Fixes an issue on Windows 10 where icon on selected color chips would be
missing in the NullableColorPicker.
Fixes (or at least significantly improves the experience) text being
truncated for the special colors in the NullableColorPicker. This was
done by removing the word "Use" from the labels and adding a visual
state trigger to change the layout of the chips and buttons when the
window becomes narrow.
Related to #18318
Campbell has been the default color scheme for a long time now,
but it has quite some issues with hue and chroma.
This PR introduces a new scheme which was created using the Oklab
color space to find colors with maximal distance to each other
and well distributed and consistent hue and chroma.
Because of this, I've named the scheme after the creator of Oklab.
Closes#17818
When Sixel images are rendered, they're automatically scaled to match
the 10x20 cell size of the original hardware terminals. If this requires
the image to be scaled down, the default GDI stretching mode can produce
ugly visual artefacts, particularly for color images. This PR changes
the stretching mode to `COLORONCOLOR`, which looks considerably better,
but without impacting performance.
The initial Sixel implementation was added in PR #17421.
## Validation Steps Performed
I've tested with a number of different images using a small font size to
trigger the downscaling, and I think the results are generally better,
although simple black on white images are still better with the default
mode (i.e. `BLACKONWHITE`), which is understandable.
I've also checked the performance with a variation of the [sixel-bench]
test, and confirmed that the new mode is no worse than the default.
[sixel-bench]: https://github.com/jerch/sixel-bench
Fixes an issue where pressing `CTRL` + `Insert` does not copy text
selected in the Command Palette. Instead, it closes it, and any text
selected in the pane is copied to the clipboard.
Since `Insert` is a virtual key, I address the issue by adding a
conditional check for `CTRL` with either `Insert` or `C` (previously, it
only checked for `CTRL` with `C`) for the copy action in the Command
Palette.
## Validation Steps Performed
I followed the reproduction steps and verified that the actual behaviour
matched the expected behaviour. All existing tests passed, but no new
test was added.
Closes#9520
## Summary of the Pull Request
Fixes a bug where VT mouse mode would round to the nearest cell when
clicking the mouse button.
The fix is to round to the nearest cell only when we're selecting text.
The other scenarios affected are:
- clicking on a hyperlink
- vt mouse mode
- where the context menu is anchored
Really the most notable ones were the first two. So now, we use the
position of the cell we clicked on. We only round for selection.
## References and Relevant Issues
Follow-up to #18106
## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments
## Validation Steps Performed
Opened Midnight Commander in Ubuntu and clicked between the two panes.
- Before: threshold was too early to switch between panes
- After: threshold is clearly separated between the outline of the two
panes
---------
Co-authored-by: Dustin L. Howett <duhowett@microsoft.com>
This PR allows users to enable the tab bar in fullscreen mode.
A new setting; "showTabsFullscreen"; has been added which accepts a
boolean value. When `true`, then the tab bar will remain visible when
the terminal app is fullscreen. If the value is `false` (default), then
the tab bar is hidden in fullscreen.
When the tab bar is visible in fullscreen, the min/max/close controls
are hidden to maintain the expected behaviour of a fullscreen app.
## Validation Steps Performed
All unit tests are passing.
Manually verified that when the "launchMode" setting is "fullscreen" and
the "showTabsFullscreen" setting is `true`, the tab bar is visible on
launch.
Manually verified that changing the setting at runtime causes the tab
bar to be shown/hidden immediately (if the terminal is currently
fullscreen).
Manually verified that the new "showTabsFullscreen" setting is honoured
regardless of whether "showTabsInTitlebar" is set to `true` or `false`.
Closes#11130
Selection is generally stored as an inclusive start and end. This PR
makes the end exclusive which now allows degenerate selections, namely
in mark mode. This also modifies mouse selection to round to the nearest
cell boundary (see #5099) and improves word boundaries to be a bit more
modern and make sense for degenerate selections (similar to #15787).
Closes#5099Closes#13447Closes#17892
## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments
- Buffer, Viewport, and Point
- Introduced a few new functions here to find word boundaries, delimiter
class runs, and glyph boundaries.
- 📝These new functions should be able to replace a few other functions
(i.e. `GetWordStart` --> `GetWordStart2`). That migration is going to be
a part of #4423 to reduce the risk of breaking UIA.
- Viewport: added a few functions to handle navigating the _exclusive_
bounds (namely allowing RightExclusive as a position for buffer
coordinates). This is important for selection to be able to highlight
the entire line.
- 📝`BottomInclusiveRightExclusive()` will replace `EndExclusive` in the
UIA code
- Point: `iterate_rows_exclusive` is similar to `iterate_rows`, except
it has handling for RightExclusive
- Renderer
- Use `iterate_rows_exclusive` for proper handling (this actually fixed
a lot of our issues)
- Remove some workarounds in `_drawHighlighted` (this is a boundary
where we got inclusive coords and made them exclusive, but now we don't
need that!)
- Terminal
- fix selection marker rendering
- `_ConvertToBufferCell()`: add a param to allow for RightExclusive or
clamp it to RightInclusive (original behavior). Both are useful!
- Use new `GetWordStart2` and `GetWordEnd2` to improve word boundaries
and make them feel right now that the selection an exclusive range.
- Convert a few `IsInBounds` --> `IsInExclusiveBounds` for safety and
correctness
- Add `TriggerSelection` to `SelectNewRegion`
- 📝 We normally called `TriggerSelection` in a different layer, but it
turns out, UIA's `Select` function wouldn't actually update the
renderer. Whoops! This fixes that.
- TermControl
- `_getTerminalPosition` now has a new param to round to the nearest
cell (see #5099)
- UIA
- `TermControlUIAProvider::GetSelectionRange` no need to convert from
inclusive range to exclusive range anymore!
- `TextBuffer::GetPlainText` now works on an exclusive range, so no need
to convert the range anymore!
## Validation Steps Performed
This fundamental change impacts a lot of scenarios:
- ✅Rendering selections
- ✅Selection markers
- ✅Copy text
- ✅Session restore
- ✅Mark mode navigation (i.e. character, word, line, buffer)
- ✅Mouse selection (i.e. click+drag, shift+click, multi-click,
alt+click)
- ✅Hyperlinks (interaction and rendering)
- ✅Accessibility (i.e. get selection, movement, text extraction,
selecting text)
- [ ] Prev/Next Command/Output (untested)
- ✅Unit tests
## Follow-ups
- Refs #4423
- Now that selection and UIA are both exclusive ranges, it should be a
lot easier to deduplicate code between selection and UIA. We should be
able to remove `EndExclusive` as well when we do that. This'll also be
an opportunity to modernize that code and use more `til` classes.
Apparently, we were using the package containing the CRT _source code_
to determine the version of the tools.
Also apparently, VS does not guarantee that that package has the same
version as the tools package.
We should use the version of the tools package instead.
As explained in the comment on `_getViewportCursorPosition`, printing
to stdout after initiating a cooked stdin reads is a race condition
between the application and the terminal. But we can significantly
reduce the likelihood of this being obvious with this change.
Related to #18265
Possibly related to #18081
## Validation Steps Performed
Execute the following Go code and start typing:
```go
package main
import (
"fmt"
"time"
)
func main() {
go func() {
time.Sleep(50 * time.Millisecond)
fmt.Printf("Here is a prompt! >")
}()
var text string
fmt.Scanln(&text)
}
```
Without this change the prompt will disappear,
and with this change in place, it'll work as expected. ✅
The code in #17909 was not completely right for padding values with
fewer than four components, and it was doing some fragile string math
(that is: if you wanted to change the third element in the padding it
would parse out the whole thing, edit the third value, and then format
it again).
This pull request moves the control's padding parser into cppwinrt_utils
(for lack of a better place) and makes the settings UI use it to parse
the padding out into a `Thickness` as early as possible. Then, the
controls operate directly on the Thickness' members rather than parsing
the padding string again.
To handle two-way serialization properly, we also required a function
that converts a thickness back into a reduced string representation
(i.e. when all four values are N, it will return "N").
As a bonus, this pull request also:
- removes another use of `std::getline`
- fixes an issue where resetting the padding would change it
(infinitesimally) and cause it to be set again
- adds a readout of the current padding value in the expander itself
- removes `MaxValueFromPaddingString`, which was apparently unused
This pull request introduces a new profile setting,
`compatibility.allowOSC52`, which defaults to `true`. When disabled, it
will not allow applications to write to the clipboard.
Security-minded folks may choose to disable it.
Reroutes the `closeWindow` action to use the `CloseWindow()` method like
the window's X button does. This includes logic to display the
confirmation dialog.
Also removes `CloseRequested` as it was only used by this action
handler. We already have `CloseWindowRequested` so we're just using that
instead.
## Validation Steps Performed
✅ `closeWindow` action while multiple tabs opened brings up the
confirmation dialog
Closes#17613
There's an existing WinUI bug where a nested Grid has it's star-sizing
ignored on Windows 10. This resulted in the New Tab Menu page looking
weird on Windows 10. This PR fixes the layout issue by applying a max
width to the first column, which will be clipped as necessary to make
space for the second column.
Part of #18281
## Validation Steps Performed
Validated the page looks good on Windows 10 and Windows 11, even after
resizing the window.
Fixes a few accessibility bugs in the SettingContainer previews. Main
changes include:
- `SettingContainer` was considered a separate UIA element from the
inner expander. It's been marked as `AccessibilityView=Raw` to "remove"
it from the UIA tree.
- Added a `CurrentValueAccessibleName` property to the
`SettingContainer` to expose the current value to the screen reader for
`SettingContainer`s that have expanders. Non-expander
`SetttingContainer`s already worked fine.
- Applied `CurrentValueAccessibleName` to various settings throughout
the settings UI for full coverage. Added a `CurrentValue` for the ones
that were missing it.
- Removed a redundant/hidden tab stop in `Icon`
`Padding` was not updated since #18300 is handling that. This'll just
automatically make it accessible.
Font axes and features weren't updated to show previews, but I'm happy
to do it if given a suggestion.
Part of #18318
## Details
- `SettingContainer` updates:
- `AccessibilityView = Raw` for `SettingContainer`s with expanders. This
is because the expander itself is the one we care about. No need to have
another layer of UIA objects saying it's a group.
- Added a `CurrentValueAccessibleName` property
- This specifically defines what should be read out by the screen
reader, similar to `AutomationProperties.Name`
- It updates automatically when `CurrentValue` changes.
- It's applied on the inner `Expander`, if one exists.
- The accessible name is constructed to be `"<Header>:
<CurrentValueAccessibleName>"`. If `CurrentValueAccessibleName` isn't
provided, we try to use the `CurrentValue` if it's a string.
- Profile (and appearance) settings:
- `Icon`'s value is now read out by a screen reader instead of staying
silent. It'll read the icon path.
- A redundant/hidden tab stop was removed from `Icon`.
- `TabTitle` now displays/reads "None" if no tab title is set.
- `ColorScheme` is now read out by a screen reader.
- The color scheme overrides (i.e. `Foreground`, `Background`,
`SelectionBackground`, and `CursorColor`) are now read out by a screen
reader. Format is "#<hex value>".
- `BackgroundImageAlignment` is now displayed and read out by a screen
reader.
- `LaunchSize` is now displayed and read out by a screen reader. Format
is "Width x Height".
## Validation Steps Performed
Tabbed through the settings UI with a screen reader. Each of these
settings now reads out a preview.
This fixes the bit check for key down and adds a few comments.
Closes#18331
## Validation Steps Performed
Printing the resulting INPUT_RECORDs shows both key down and up events
when pressing F7. Alt-Space now also works again.
The CoreWindow approach to implementing this has proven itself to be bug
prone. This PR switches to using the much better Win32 ShowCursor API,
which uses a reference count. This prevents the exact sort of race
condition we have where we we disable the cursor in our code and the
WinUI code then sets it to a different cursor internally which gets the
system out of sync. There's no WinUI API to just hide the cursor and if
it did, it would probably be a Boolean which would result in the same
issue.
Closes#18400
## Validation Steps Performed
It's difficult to assert the correctness of this approach, outside of
just trying it out (which I did and it works). The good news is that
this uses a static bool to ensure we only hide it exactly once and show
it exactly once and we do the latter on every WM_ACTIVATE message which
should hopefully restore the cursor when tabbing out and back in at
least.
CodeQL is raising errors when building Visual Studio since they have a
dependency on Windows Terminal for our integrated terminal. The issue
raised by CodeQL refers to a non-constant string format, but in this
case the string comes from a resource file and should be considered
constant.
The conhost window uses the window message WM_GETDPISCALEDSIZE to scale
its client rect non-linearly. This is done to keep the rows and columns
from changing when the window changes (font sizes scale non-linearly).
If you size the window such that the text perfectly fits the width (and
cursor is on the first row of the next line), dragging the window
between monitors with different DPIs should NOT change how much of the
text fits on each line.
https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/win32/hidpi/wm-getdpiscaledsize
The current code is assuming that the size that should be scaled is the
current window size. This is sometimes the case, for example when
dragging a window between monitors, but it is not always the case. This
message can sometimes contain a size that is different from the window's
current size. For example, if the window is maximized, minimized, or
snapped (the size in these cases is the normal rect, or restore rect).
The msdn page above does (now) call this out, though it is possible that
this was added after this conhost code was added...
> The LPARAM is an in/out pointer to a SIZE struct. The _In_ value in
the LPARAM is the pending size of the window after a user-initiated move
or a call to SetWindowPos.
If the window is being resized, this size is not necessarily the same as
the window's current size at the time this message is received.
This incorrect assumption can cause the conhost window to be
unexpectedly large/small in some cases. For example:
1. Requires two monitors, set to different DPIs.
2. Size window somewhat small, and type text to fit exactly the width of
the window, putting cursor on first row of next line.
3. Win+Left (or otherwise snap/arrange the window).
4. Win+Shift+Left (migrates the window to the other monitor)
5. Win+Shift+Down (restore window, can also click maximize caption
button twice, maximizing then restoring)
Expected: The window should restore to the original logical size, with
the text perfectly fitting one line.
Actual: The window restores to another size; it is the snapped size on
the original monitor (the size of the window at the time it was changing
DPI, in step 4 above).
## References and Relevant Issues
This message (WM_GETDPISCALEDSIZE) is not widely used, but it is used by
dialogs (user32!CreateDialog), since they also size their windows using
font sizes. The code in this change borrows from the code in the dialog
manager, user32!GetDialogDpiScaledSize.
## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments
The WM_GETDPISCALEDSIZE message contains the new DPI and the new size,
which is an in/out parameter. It starts as the new window size, scaled
to the window's current DPI, and is expected to be scaled to the new
DPI.
The client area (the part with the text) is NOT scaled linearly. For
example, if the font at 100% DPI has a height of 7, it could have a
height of 15 at 200%. (And if it did have a height of 14, linearly
scaled, it would surely not be linearly scaled at 150%, since fonts
cannot have a height of 10.5.) To pick the right size, we need to
resolve the font at the new DPI and use its actual size to scale the
client area.
To keep the amount of text in the window the same, we need to remove the
non-client area of the window (caption bars, resize borders, etc). The
non-client area is outside the area with the text, and its size depends
on the window's DPI and window styles. To remove it and add it back, we
need to:
- Reduce the provided window rect size by the non-client size at the
current DPI.
- Scale the client size using the new/old font sizes.
- Expand the final size by the non-client size at the new DPI.
Fixes
* Cursor vanishing, because
```cpp
CoreWindow::GetForCurrentThread().PointerCursor()
```
returned a non-null, but still invisible cursor.
* Alt/F7 not dispatching to newly created windows, because the
`WM_ACTIVATE` message now arrives before the `AppHost` is initialized.
This caused the messages to be delivered to old windows.
* Windows Terminal blocking expedited shutdown,
because we return `FALSE` on non-`ENDSESSION_CLOSEAPP` messages.
Closes#18331Closes#18335
## Validation Steps Performed
* Cursor still doesn't really vanish for me in the first place ✅
* Alt/F7 work in new windows without triggering old ones ✅
win10-* is no longer a valid rid
https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/dotnet/core/compatibility/sdk/8.0/rid-graph
This package would fail to install the dependencies to the correct
location in .net 8 and later by default. win-x64 is a valid runtime id
in prior .net versions so I think this should be back compat.
Without this the package fails to do its job on newer builds unless `
<UseRidGraph>true</UseRidGraph>` and the user sets `win10-x64` as their
RID in their project file.
Forgetti di spaghetti in #18215.
Closes#18324
## Validation Steps Performed
* Launch through the start menu
* Explicitly minimize
* Then...
* Launch through the start menu again ✅
* Launch via wtd.exe in Win+R ✅
* Launch via wtd.exe in another Terminal ✅
* Launch via handoff ✅
CodeQL is raising errors when building Visual Studio since we have a
dependency on Windows Terminal for our integrated terminal. The issue
raised is not applicable to this case and therefore requires a
suppression comment to ignore the raised error.
## Summary of the Pull Request
Adds the Profile.BellSound setting to the Settings UI under the Profile > Advanced page.
- View changes:
- The setting is exposed via an expander placed near the Profile.BellStyle setting.
- Added a button to be able to preview the added sound
- Added a browse button that opens a file picker
- Added a delete button to be able to delete each sound entry
- View model changes:
- `CurrentBellSounds` keeps track of the bell sounds added and exposed via the UI.
- `BellSoundViewModel` wraps each sound. This allows us to listen (and propagate) changes to the registered sounds.
- `BellSoundPreview` provides a written preview of the current bell sound to display in the expander
#10000
As before, a minor refactor:
* I started off by removing the Monarch/Peasant with the goal of moving
it into and deduplicating its functionality with `WindowEmperor`.
* Since I needed a replacement for the Monarch (= ensures that there's
a single instance), I wrote single-instance code with a NT mutex
and by yeeting data across processes with `WM_COPYDATA`.
* This resulted in severe threading issues, because it now started up
way faster. The more I tried to solve them the deeper I had to dig,
because you can't just put a mutex around `CascadiaSettings`.
I then tried to seeif WinUI can run multiple windows on a single
thread and, as it turns out, it can.
So, I removed the multi- from the window threading.
* At this point I had dig about 1 mile deep and brought no ladder.
So, to finish it up, I had to clean up the entire eventing system
around `WindowEmperor`, cleaned up all the coroutines,
and cleaned up all the callbacks.
Closes#16183Closes#16221Closes#16487Closes#16532Closes#16733Closes#16755Closes#17015Closes#17360Closes#17420Closes#17457Closes#17799Closes#17976Closes#18057Closes#18084Closes#18169Closes#18176Closes#18191
## Validation Steps Performed
* It does not crash ✅
* New/close tab ✅
* New/close window ✅
* Move tabs between windows ✅
* Split tab into new window ✅
* Persist windows on exit / restore startup ✅
## Summary of the Pull Request
Adds some pre-existing settings ($profile.foreground,
$profile.background, $profile.selectionBackground, $profile.cursorColor)
to the settings UI. This was accomplished by introducing a new control:
NullableColorPicker. This control allows the user to pick a color from
the color scheme, set the color to null, and select a color from an
advanced color picker.
Improves the UI for the Profile.Icon setting by adding an "Icon Type"
combo box. This allows the user to pick from multiple options:
- None: sets the icon to "none" which is interpreted as no icon
- Built-in Icon: presents a combo box that enumerates the Segoe MDL 2
assets
- Emoji: presents a text box with a hint to open the emoji picker
- File: presents a text box to input the path of the image to use
Additionally, the rendered icon is displayed in the setting container.
If "none", "none" is presented to the user (localized).
## References and Relevant Issues
#10000
## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments
- NullableColorPicker control
- includes a built-in NullColorButton to set the current value to null
- includes a "More colors..." button to display an advanced color picker
- uses data templates on data templates (data templates squared?) to
convert the current color scheme into a grid of color chips
- color chips display a checkmark (similar to Windows settings
personalization). This automatically updates its color to stay compliant
with color contrast.
- color chips are added to a list so we can (un)check them when a new
color is selected
- SettingsContainer changes
- Forked `ExpanderSettingContainerStyle` to allow for a custom preview
template. This way, we can display the current value in the expander and
we're not just limited to text.
- changed type of `CurrentValue` property from `String` to
`IInspectable`
- added `CurrentValueTemplate` property to control how to display the
current value
- Miscellaneous:
- Added a few converters (`BooleanToVisibility`, `ColorToString`,
`ColorToBrush`)
- Added `NameWithHexCode` to `ColorTableEntry` to expose a color as `Red
#RRGGBB` (used for tooltips and a11y)
- Added `ForegroundPreview` (and equivalent for other colors) to
AppearanceViewModel to deduce the color that will be used
## Validation Steps Performed
- [X] a11y pass (NVDA, keyboard)
- [X] set the color to one of the color chips
- [X] set the color to null
- [X] set the color to a value from the integrated color picker
- [X] control updates properly when a new color scheme is selected
- [X] control updates properly when a color scheme has multiple colors
of the same value
## Follow-ups
- [A11y] Screen readers don't read expander's preview text
- Add Tab Color to settings UI
- Update CursorColor preview to display #FFFFFF as "invert"
- Use Leonard's font picker UI, with the Segoe icon picker, so that you
can filter the list
If we colored a tab, then switched to another tab, there's a bug that
the unselected tab loses its color. This was introduced in PR #18109.
This PR fixes that by actually applying the selected color to the tab
(whoops). Additionally, I removed setting the
"TabViewItemHeaderCloseButtonBackground" resource because it looked
weird (see comment in PR).
Closes#18226
Left, Top, Right and Bottom paddings can be set separetely in
`Appearance`. I tried to make it as close as possible to one of the
suggestions in #9127. I hope it doesn't look that bad.
Closes#9127
* Previously we would mark all gc=Cf (Control, format) codepoints
as zero-width, but that ignores that the majority of them are also
GCB=CN (Control = does not join), which meant we ended up with
zero-width grapheme clusters. Those cannot exist under a terminal.
So, this PR makes all gc=Cf, GCB=CN codepoints zero-width, but also
treats them as Extender codepoints, which mirrors `wcswidth`.
* This PR also updates the tables to Unicode 16.0.
* Finally, there's a minor code cleanup of the generator.
Closes#18267
## Validation Steps Performed
* Unit tests ✅
* Thai does not have random gaps anymore due to ZWSP ✅
This increases the console IO buffer size to retain at least 128KiB as
this matches the default buffer size of `cat`. This avoids allocator
churn due to constantly freeing and reallocating buffers. In the future
this should ideally use a better suited, cheap allocator.
Closes#18286
## Summary of the Pull Request
Added open current directory action.
## References and Relevant Issues
Need to set this:
https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/terminal/tutorials/new-tab-same-directory
## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments
## Validation Steps Performed
- Ensure shell has been configured
- Run "Open current working directory" action in command palette
- File explorer opens the correct directory
## PR Checklist
- [x] Closes#12859
- [ ] Tests added/passed
- [ ] Documentation updated
- If checked, please file a pull request on [our docs
repo](https://github.com/MicrosoftDocs/terminal) and link it here: #xxx
- [ ] Schema updated (if necessary)
This upgrades to [check-spelling v0.0.24].
A number of GitHub APIs are being turned off shortly, so we need to
upgrade or various uncertain outcomes will occur.
There are some minor bugs that I'm aware of and which I've fixed since
this release (including a couple I discovered while preparing this PR).
There's a new accessibility forbidden pattern:
#### Should be `cannot` (or `can't`)
See https://www.grammarly.com/blog/cannot-or-can-not/
> Don't use `can not` when you mean `cannot`. The only time you're
likely to see `can not` written as separate words is when the word `can`
happens to precede some other phrase that happens to start with `not`.
> `Can't` is a contraction of `cannot`, and it's best suited for
informal writing.
> In formal writing and where contractions are frowned upon, use
`cannot`.
> It is possible to write `can not`, but you generally find it only as
part of some other construction, such as `not only . . . but also.`
- if you encounter such a case, add a pattern for that case to
patterns.txt.
```
\b[Cc]an not\b
```
[check-spelling v0.0.24]: https://github.com/check-spelling/check-spelling/releases/tag/v0.0.24
Signed-off-by: Josh Soref <2119212+jsoref@users.noreply.github.com>
## Summary of the Pull Request
Adds customization for the New Tab Menu to the settings UI.
- Settings Model changes:
- The Settings UI generally works by creating a copy of the entire
settings model objects on which we apply the changes to. Turns out, we
completely left the NewTabMenu out of that process. So I went ahead and
implemented it.
- `FolderEntry`
- `FolderEntry` exposes `Entries()` (used by the new tab menu to figure
out what to actually render) and `RawEntries()` (the actual JSON data
deserialized into settings model objects). I went ahead and exposed
`RawEntries()` since we'll need to apply changes to it to then
serialize.
- View Model:
- `NewTabMenuViewModel` is the main view model that interacts with the
page. It maintains the current view of items and applies changes to the
settings model.
- `NewTabMenuEntryViewModel` and all of the other `_EntryViewModel`
classes are wrappers for the settings model NTM entries.
- `FolderTreeViewEntry` encapsulates `FolderEntryViewModel`. It allows
us to construct a `TreeView` of just folders.
- View changes and additions:
- Added FontIconGlyph to the SettingContainer
- Added a New Tab Menu item to the navigation view
- Adding entries: a stack of SettingContainers is used here. We use the
new `FontIconGlyph` to make this look nice!
- Reordering entries: drag and drop is supported! This might not work in
admin mode though, and we can't drag and drop into folders. Buttons were
added to make this keyboard accessible.
- To move entries into a folder, a button was added which then displays
a TreeView of all folders.
- Multiple entries can be moved to a folder or deleted at once!
- Breadcrumbs are used for folders
- When a folder is entered, additional controls are displayed to
customize that folder.
## Verification
- ✅ a11y pass
- ✅ keyboard accessible
- scenarios:
- ✅ add entries (except actions)
- ✅ changes propagated to settings model (aka "saving works")
- ✅ reorder entries
- ✅ move entries to an existing folder
- ✅ delete multiple entries
- ✅ delete individual entries
- ✅ display entries (including actions)
## Follow-ups
- [ ] add support for adding and editing action entries
- [ ] when we discard changes or save, it would be cool if we could stay
on the same page
- [ ] allow customizing the folder entry _before_ adding it (current
workaround is to add it, then edit it)
- [ ] improve UI for setting icon (reuse UI from #17965)
There were two bugs:
* Ever since the conhost v1 -> v2 rewrite the `readDataDirect.cpp`
implementation incorrectly passed `false` as the wait flag.
The unintentional mistake is obvious in hindsight as the
check for `CONSOLE_STATUS_WAIT` makes no sense in this case.
* The ConPTY integration into `InputBuffer` was done incorrectly,
as it would unconditionally wake up the readers/waiters without
checking if the buffer is now actually non-empty.
Closes#15859
## Validation Steps Performed
Test code:
```cpp
#include <Windows.h>
#include <stdio.h>
int main() {
HANDLE in = GetStdHandle(STD_INPUT_HANDLE);
INPUT_RECORD buf[128];
DWORD read;
SetConsoleMode(
in,
ENABLE_PROCESSED_INPUT | ENABLE_VIRTUAL_TERMINAL_INPUT
);
for (int i = 0; ReadConsoleInputW(in, buf, 128, &read); ++i) {
printf("%d read=%lu\n", i, read);
}
return 0;
}
```
Run it under Windows Terminal and type any input. >50% of all
inputs will result in `read=0`. This is fixed after this PR.
As it turns out, you cannot use `<uap17:UpdateWhileInUse>`
(or any other newer namespace) unless you declare a corresponding
`MaxVersionTested` in your package manifest.
It does not appear that there's a reason for this, it just is.
`MaxVersionTested` is not to be confused with the `maxversiontested`,
which is something else entirely, but I updated it for safe measure.
Since `maxversiontested` is not a "max", but rather a list
of tested versions, it gets appended to the end of the list.
Closes#18119
The current `FindWindowOfActiveTSF` implementation can
result in infinite recursion which we must guard again.
This change is not tested as I don't know how to trigger
the issue to begin with (a missing CoreInput thread).
This change prevents `throttled_func` from reading uninitialized memory
under some yet-unkown circumstances. The tl;dr is:
This simply moves the callback invocation into the storage.
That way we can centrally avoid invoking the callback accidentally.
* This fixes a regression in 391abafc, which caused attached clients
to receive CTRL_CLOSE_EVENTs, etc., in oldest-to-newest order,
while historically the opposite is expected.
* It also changes the behavior of `ProcessCtrlEvents` to dispatch
these events no matter whether a client is already dead.
This restores the Windows XP to Windows 8.1 behavior.
Both of these fixes would address the issue on their own.
Closes#15373
## Validation Steps Performed
* CloseTest from our repository shows newest-to-oldest order again.
* node gets killed when run under npm and closing the tab.
This reverts commit 5fdfd51209,
because 3 people complained about this change VS 1 person
requesting the change to be made in the first place.
Closes#18138Reopens#17797 for discussion
When file/folder is dropped to the terminal, its path is translated and
quoted with a pair of single quotes if necessary.
However, the terminal control does not escape single quotes (allowed in
the Win32 subsystem) that need escapes when translated.
On the translation styles other than `"none"` (note: all other
translation styles are currently intended for the POSIX shell), it
causes incorrect path to be pasted when the path contains one or more
single quotes (see #18006 for an example).
With this commit, the terminal control escapes a single quote with a
valid escape sequence `'\''` (finish quote, print a single quote then
begin quote again) when the path translation is required.
## History
### v1 → v2
* Changed escape sequence from `'"'"'` to much shorter `'\''`.
* Reflected comments by the reviewer.
### v2 → v3
* Overhaul after addition of multiple path translation styles (not just
WSL but Cygwin and MSYS).
* More clarification both in the code and in the commit message.
### v3 → v4 (current)
* Minor clarification both in the code and in the commit message.
## References and Relevant Issues
* #18006
* #16214
* #18195
## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments
This is a follow-up of #16214 and #18195, fixing #18006.
Closes#18006
microsoft/vcpkg-tool#1474 now validates that the target triplet is
valid. Unfortunately, `ARM64` is not valid... despite VS defaulting to
it.
VS 17.12 moved to the newer version of the vcpkg tool.
Given that we still want to build on VS 17.12, this commit adds a local
workaround.
See DD-2302065 for the internal tracking bug.
See microsoft/vcpkg#42182 for the upstream fix.
## Summary of the Pull Request
This extends the copy command to be able to include control sequences,
for use in tools that subsequently know how to parse and display that.
## References and Relevant Issues
https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/issues/15703
## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments
At a high level, this:
- Expands the `CopyTextArgs` to have a `withControlSequences` bool.
- Plumbs that bool down through many layers to where we actuall get
data out of the text buffer.
- Modifies the existing `TextBuffer::Serialize` to be more generic
and renames it to `TextBuffer::ChunkedSerialize`.
- Uses the new `ChunkedSerialize` to generate the data for the copy
request.
## Validation Steps Performed
To test this I've manually:
- Generated some styled terminal contents, copied it with the control
sequences, pasted it into a file, `cat`ed the file and seen that it
looks the same.
- Set `"firstWindowPreference": "persistedWindowLayout"` and
validated that the contents of windows are saved and
restored with styling intact.
I also checked that `Invoke-OpenConsoleTests` passed.
## PR Checklist
- [x] Closes#15703
- [ ] Tests added/passed
- [x] Documentation updated
- If checked, please file a pull request on [our docs
repo](https://github.com/MicrosoftDocs/terminal) and link it here:
https://github.com/MicrosoftDocs/terminal/pull/756
- [x] Schema updated (if necessary)
`pathTranslationStyle` has four options:
- `none`: Do no translation
- `wsl`: Translate `C:\` to `/mnt/c` and `\\wsl$\Foo\bar` to `/bar`
- `cygwin`: Translate `C:\` to `/cygdrive/c`
- `msys2`: Translate `C:\` to `/c`
It is intended as a broadly-supported replacement for us checking the
source every time the user drops a path.
We no longer need to push the source name all the way down to the
control.
I am hesitant to commit to using other folks' product names in our
settings model,
however, these are almost certainly more recognizable than whatever
other weird
names we could come up with.
The Git Bash fragment extension profile could conceivably use
`pathTranslationStyle`
`msys2` to make sure drag/dropped paths look right.
The original intent with dynamic profiles was that they could be
uninstalled but that Terminal would remember your settings in case they
ever came back.
After we implemented dynamic profile _deletion_, however, we
accidentally made it so that saving your settings after a dynamic
profile disappeared scoured it from the planet _forever_ (since we
remembered that we generated it, but now it was no longer in the
settings file).
This pull request implements:
- Tracking for orphaned dynamic profiles
- A new settings page for the profile that explains what happened
- Badging on the Navigation Menu indicating which profiles are orphaned
and which are hidden
Closes#14061Closes#11510
Refs #13916
Refs #9997
This slightly modifies the builtin glyph width and corner radius to
more closely match Cascadia Mono. Previously, at low DPI (100% scale),
the corner radius was barely noticeable which looked kind of bad.
I sure hope I didn't break anything!
While `til::math` was a good idea its convenience led us to use it
in the only place where it absolutely must not be used: The UI code.
So, this PR replaces all those `til::point`s, etc., with floats.
Now we use DIPs consistently throughout all layers of the UI code,
except for the UIA area (that would've required too many changes).
## Validation Steps Performed
Launch, looks good, no obvious defects, UIA positioning seems ok. ✅
This PR makes it so the path to nuget in this repo is prepended. This
will make it so the local `nuget.exe` is prioritised before looking for
nuget in `PATH`.
## Validation Steps Performed
Run `razzle.cmd`, the local instance of nuget is utilised.
Delete `nuget.exe`, `razzle.cmd` uses `nuget.exe` specificed in the
`PATH`.
Closes#1111
This adds support to the Terminal for parsing Markdown to XAML. We're
using https://github.com/github/cmark-gfm as our parser, so that we can
support the fullness of github-flavored markdown.
The parser parses the markdown to produce a `RichTextBlock`, which
covers just about all the scenarios we need. Since we're initially just
targeting using this for "Release notes", I didn't implement
_everything_ in markdown[^1]. But headers, bold & italic, unordered
lists, images, links, code spans & blocks - all that works. We can work
on additional elements as we need them. The parser is encapsulated into
`Microsoft.Terminal.UI.Markdown.dll`, so that we won't load it on
startup, only when the pane is actually made the first time.
To test this out, I've added a `MarkdownPaneContent` pane type on
`x-markdown` (the `x-` is "experimental"). Go ahead and add that with:
```json
{ "command": { "action": "splitPane", "type": "x-markdown" } }
```
That's got the ability to load arbitrary MD files and render them. I
wouldn't call that experience finished though[^2][^3](and it probably
won't be in 1.22 timeframe). However, it is an excellent testbed for
validating what we do and do not support.
We'll use the markdown parser Soon<sup>TM</sup> for the What's New
panes.
* Done in pursuit of displaying release notes in the Terminal.
* Doesn't quite close out #16495
* Should make #8647 possible
* may help with #16484
[^1]: the most notable gap being "block quotes" with `>`. I don't think
I can draw a vertical line in a rich text block easily. Footnotes are
also missing, as well as tables.
[^2]: I say it's not finished because the aforementioned MD gaps. Also
the UX there is not polished at all.
[^3]: I don't believe we'll have time to polish out the pure markdown
pane for 1.22, but what the parser covers now is more than enough for
the release notes pane in time for 1.22
- build(deps-dev): bump braces from 3.0.2 to 3.0.3
- build(deps-dev): bump @types/node from 16.18.96 to 16.18.101
- build(deps-dev): bump ts-jest from 29.1.2 to 29.1.5
- build(deps-dev): bump @typescript-eslint/parser from 7.6.0 to 7.14.1
- build(deps-dev): bump @typescript-eslint/eslint-plugin from 7.6.0 to
7.14.1
- build(deps-dev): bump eslint-plugin-jest from 27.9.0 to 28.6.0
- Dependabot/npm and yarn/eslint plugin jest 28.6.0 fixes
Originally, the XAML resources were being applied on the TabView's
ResourceDictionary directly. However, high contrast mode has a few weird
scenarios as it basically reduces the color palette to just a few colors
to ensure high contrast. This PR now stores the resources onto the
ThemeDictionaries so that we have more control over the colors used.
## References and Relevant Issues
Closes#17913Closes#13067
## Validation Steps Performed
Compared the following scenarios to WinUI 2 gallery's TabView when in
High Contrast mode:
✅ (Un)selected tab
✅ hover over x of (un)selected tab
✅ hover over unselected tab
## Summary of the Pull Request
Adds a "Move tab" submenu to the tab's context menu. This submenu includes "move tab to new window", "move left", and "move right".
The new "move left/right" items are disabled if the tab can't be moved in a certain direction.'
Closes#17900
"HighContrast" is not a possible requested theme. So `_UpdateBackgroundForMica()` would force the settings UI to be light or dark. To fix this, we just check if we're in high contrast mode and, if so, we don't bother setting the requested theme.
Turns out that having the styles for the KeyChordText and ParsedCommandLineText be empty for high contrast mode caused the issue. Since we're already using theme resources for the colors, we automatically adjust properly to whatever the high contrast theme is (Thanks XAML!).
Bonus points:
- we didn't need the theme dictionaries anymore, so I just moved them to the ResourceDictionary directly
- ParsedCommandLineTextBlockStyle isn't used. So I removed it altogether.
Validated command palette with multiple high contrast themes. See PR thread for demo.
Closes#17914
Reading through our existing patterns for integer parsing, I noticed
that we'd be better off returning them as optionals.
This also allowed me to improve the implementation to support integers
all the way up to their absolute maximum/minimum.
Furthermore, I noticed that `prefix_split` was unsound:
If the last needle character was the last character in the remaining
text, the remaining text would be updated to an empty string view.
The caller would then have no idea if there's 1 more token left
or if the string is truly empty.
To solve this, this PR introduces an iterator class. This will allow
it to be used in our VT parser code.
## Summary of the Pull Request
This PR is to allow users to set a custom icon for entries in the new tab menu for "action" and "profile" type entries.
## References and Relevant Issues
This PR is in response to #18103
## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments
It is now possible to specify an optional "icon" setting for any "action" or "profile" type entry in the "newTabMenu" JSON settings. When specified, this icon will be used as the menu icon for that action/profile in the new tab menu. If not specified, the action/profile definition's default icon will be used instead (if present).
The Cascadia settings schema ("doc/cascadia/profiles.schema.json") has been updated to reflect this.
## Validation Steps Performed
Manually tested with multiple combinations of icon settings:
- ActionEntry:
- valid path in action definition and new tab entry (renders new tab entry icon)
- valid path in action definition but no path in new tab entry (renders action definition icon)
- no path in action definition, valid path in new tab entry (renders new tab entry icon)
- invalid path in action definition, valid path in new tab entry (renders new tab entry icon)
- valid path in action definition, invalid path in new tab entry (renders no icon)
- invalid path in both (renders no icon)
- no path in both (renders no icon)
- ProfileEntry:
- valid path in new tab entry (renders new tab entry icon)
- no path in new tab entry (renders profile's default icon)
- invalid path in new tab entry (renders no icon)
## PR Checklist
- [x] Closes#18103
- [x] Tests added/passed
- [x] Documentation updated
- If checked, please file a pull request on [our docs repo](https://github.com/MicrosoftDocs/terminal) and link it here: [#808](https://github.com/MicrosoftDocs/terminal/pull/808)
- [x] Schema updated (if necessary)
I wrote a big comment next to the changes I made.
This is a redo of #17961 which had various issues.
Closes#17916Closes#18070
## Validation Steps Performed
* Pressing Enter within the input line doesn't crash ✅
* Type "Cour" and pick Courier New, press Save = Saved ✅
* Pick any other font from the dropdown, press Save = Saved ✅
* Picking an option dismisses focus but not to the tab row ✅
* The first time after launching the SUI, when the setting is still
unmodified, when you focus the box and pick an option,
it'll unfocus the box ✅
* When the setting is unmodified, and you pick the default
(Cascadia Mono), it'll still unfocus the box ✅
This adds a basic policy check for DisabledProfileSources, so that
organizations can easily disable certain profiles like the Azure one.
Closes#17964
## Validation Steps Performed
* Add a policy to disable Azure under HKCU. Disabled ✅
* Add a policy to disable nothing under HKLM. Enabled ✅
(...because it overrides the HKCU setting.)
The settings UI and settings model allow you to set the icon to "none"
to hide the icon (you can actually see this effect in the settings UI
when changing the value of the profile icon). However, during settings
validation, "none" is considered a file path, which is then failed to be
parsed, resulting in the icon being marked as invalid and immediately
clearing the value.
This PR fixes this issue by considering "none" to be an accepted value
during validation.
Related to #15843Closes#17943
## Validation Steps Performed
When an icon is set to "none", ...
✅ no more warning
✅ the icon is hidden
## Summary of the Pull Request
Adds a global Compatibility page to the settings UI. This page exposes
several existing settings and introduces a few new settings:
- compatibility.allowHeadless
- compatibility.isolatedMode
- compatibility.textMeasurement
- debugFeatures
This also adds a Terminal subpage for profiles in the settings UI. This
page includes:
- suppressApplicationTitle
- compatibility.input.forceVT
- compatibility.allowDECRQCRA
- answerbackMessage
Several smaller changes were accomplished as a part of this PR:
- `experimental.input.forceVT` was renamed to
`compatibility.input.forceVT`
- introduced the `compatibility.allowDECRQCRA` setting
- updated the schema for these new settings and
`compatibility.allowHeadless` (which was missing)
- add `Feature_DebugModeUI` feature flag to control if debug features
should be shown in the SUI
Verified accessible via Accessibility Insights
A part of #10000Closes#16672
## Summary of the Pull Request
Adds the following settings to the settings UI:
- $profile.RainbowSuggestions
- $profile.CellWidth
- $global.SearchWebDefaultQueryUrl
- $global.EnableColorSelection
- $global.ShowAdminShield
- $global.EnableUnfocusedAcrylic
Additionally, the following settings have graduated from experimental 🎓:
- $profile.rightClickContextMenu
Part of #10000
This fixes a lot of subtle issues:
* Avoid emitting another de-/iconify VT sequence when
we encounter a (de)iconify VT sequence during parsing.
* Avoid emitting a de-/iconify VT sequence when
a focus event is received on the signal pipe.
* Avoid emitting such sequences on startup.
* Avoid emitting multiple such sequences
when rapidly un-/focusing the window.
It's also a minor cleanup, because the `GA_ROOTOWNER` is not security
relevant. It was added because there was concern that someone can just
spawn a ConPTY session, tell it that it's focused, and spawn a child
which is now focused. But why would someone do that, when the console
IOCTLs to do so are not just publicly available but also documented?
I also disabled the IME window.
## Validation Steps Performed
* First:
```cpp
int main() {
for (bool show = false;; show = !show) {
printf(show ? "Show in 3s...\n" : "Hide in 3s...\n");
Sleep(3000);
ShowWindow(GetConsoleWindow(), show ? SW_SHOW : SW_HIDE);
}
}
```
* PowerShell 5's `Get-Credential` gains focus ✅
* `sleep 5; Get-Credential` and focus another app. WT should start
blinking in the taskbar. Restore it. The popup has focus ✅
* Run `:hardcopy` in vim: Window is shown centered at (0,0) ✖️
But that's okay because it does that already anyway ✅
* `Connect-AzAccount` doesn't crash PowerShell ✅
This PR adds support for the `S8C1T` and `S7C1T` commands, which enable
an application to choose whether the terminal should use C1 controls
when sending key sequences and query responses.
This also updates the `DOCS` command to set both the input and output
code pages. So when switched to ISO2022 mode, the C1 controls will be
transmitted as 8-bit, which is what legacy systems would be expecting.
## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments
While adding the input code page support, I also reworked the way we
handle the code page reset in `RIS`. In the original implementation we
saved the active code page when the `DOCS` sequence was first used, and
that would become the default value for a reset.
With this PR I'm now saving the code pages whenever `SetConsoleCP` or
`SetConsoleOutputCP` is called, so those APIs now control what the
default values will be. This feels more consistent than the previous
approach. And this is how WSL sets its initial code page to UTF-8.
## Validation Steps Performed
I've added a couple of unit tests that check one of each applicable C1
control in the key sequences and query reports.
I also built myself a code page aware telnet client so I could log into
WSL in 8-bit mode, and confirmed that the C1 transmissions are working
as expected in vttest.
Closes#17931
Tests added/passed
`AutoSuggestBox` has a `SuggestionChosen` event and any reasonable
person would assume that this means one of the items was chosen.
But with WinUI it's raised whenever a suggestion is merely highlighted.
`QuerySubmitted` is the right event instead. Clearly that naming is
a lot better than `SuggestionChosen`, since the property to get the
chosen item is called `ChosenSuggestion`.
WinUI, like the unrelenting wilderness of a world indifferent to human
suffering, stands as a testament to the futility of human aspiration.
Closes#17916
## Validation Steps Performed
* Type "Casc"
* Move up/down with the arrow keys
* Neither the filtered list nor the text updates ✅
* Press Enter on an item
* Text updates ✅
Adds the following settings to the Interaction page under a Warnings subsection:
- ConfirmCloseAllTabs
- InputServiceWarning
- WarnAboutLargePaste
- WarnAboutMultiLinePaste
This also changes the JSON keys of those settings to be in the `warning` namespace as a QOL change for JSON users. We still handle the legacy keys, don't worry 😉.
#10000
This adds a "defaultInputScope" setting, hooks it up to our TSF,
and exposes it as a setting in the UI under the startup page.
In order to stay close with the other language setting, I moved that
one from the appearance to the startup page as well.
20 out of the 26 files in this PR are boilerplate unfortunately.
Closes#17816
## Validation Steps Performed
* Install and use the Chinese IME
* Launch WT
* Chinese input ✅
* Change setting to `alphanumericHalfWidth`
* Restart WT
* English input ✅
Without a VT "renderer" there's no implicit output anymore when
calling `ClearPseudoConsole`. The fix is trivial, but it works
slightly different from before: Previously, we would preserve
the line the cursor is on, while this PR doesn't do that.
I felt like there's not much merit in preserving the line,
because it may be a multi-line prompt which won't work with that.
Closes#17867
## Validation Steps Performed
Bind 3 different actions to the 3 variants of "Clear buffer"
and test them. They work. ✅
* Don't reset the position entirely when changing the needle
* Don't change the scroll position when output arrives
* Don't interfere with the search when output arrives constantly
Closes#17301
## Validation Steps Performed
* In pwsh, run `10000..20000 | % { sleep 0.25; $_ }`
* You can search for e.g. `1004` and it'll find 10 results. ✅
* You can scroll up and down past it and it won't snap back
when new output arrives. ✅
* `while ($true) { Write-Host -NoNewline "`e[Ha"; sleep 0.0001; }`
* You can cycle between the hits effortlessly. ✅ (This tests that
the constantly reset `OutputIdle` event won't interfere.)
* On input change, the focused result is near the previous one. ✅
Because `_layoutLine` would never return `column == columnLimit` for
control character visualizers, we'd get a deadlock in `_redisplay`,
as it tries to fill the line until it's full, but never achieve it.
Closes#17893
## Validation Steps Performed
* Press Ctrl-A to insert "^A"
* Press Home to get to the start of the prompt
* Press and hold "A" until the line wraps
* The line wraps and there's no deadlock ✅
## Summary of the Pull Request
The sixel parser has an internal buffer that holds the indexed-color
representation of the image, prior to it being translated to RGB. This
buffer only retains the section of the image that is within the visible
viewport, so we're continually erasing segments from the top of it when
the image is large enough to trigger a scroll.
But there is a problem that arises if the window or font is resized so
that the buffer needs to reflow, because that can result in the image
being pushed entirely offscreen. At that point the segment we're trying
to erase is actually larger than the buffer itself, which can end up
causing the terminal to crash
To fix this, we just need to check for an oversized erase attempt and
simply clear the buffer instead.
## Validation Steps Performed
I could easily reproduce this crash in Windows Terminal by resizing the
font while viewing an animated gif with img2sixel. With this PR applied
the crash no longer occurs.
## PR Checklist
- [x] Closes#17947
This just adds a quick registry check for `EnableHexNumpad`.
Depends on #17774Closes#17762 (again)
## Validation Steps Performed
* Alt + NumpadAdd + 221E doesn't do anything ✅
* Set the `EnableHexNumpad` registry key
* Restart
* Alt + NumpadAdd + 221E inserts ∞ ✅
## Summary of the Pull Request
Fixes some issues with truncated text in the settings UI when 200% text
scaling is applied.
For #17897, a minimum height was applied instead of a plain "height".
This ensures that the desired height is applied in general, but under
200% text scaling, we are allowed to grow past that, thus preventing the
truncation of the text.
For #17898, flyouts have a scroll viewer inside them by default. We
actually don't want the scroll viewer because that means the text will
appear "truncated" when in reality, the user is expected to notice the
small scrollbar and scroll horizontally (why that's the default, I will
never know). This PR introduces a new style that can be applied to these
flyouts to cause text wrapping instead of horizontal scrolling. Looked
through the app for any instances where this happens.
For #12006, simply changing the column width from a static value to
"auto" fixes the issue. Frankly, we care more about the text appearing
as a whole (and as whole words). The name of the actions wrap properly
anyways.
Closes#17897Closes#17898Closes#12006
## Summary of the Pull Request
This improves our `RIS` (hard reset) implementation, so it now also
resets any changes that are made to the color table and color aliases,
which is one of the things it's supposed to be doing.
## References and Relevant Issues
This is also a small step towards implementing the `OSC` sequences that
reset individual color table entries (issue #3719).
## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments
The way this works is by having a second copy of the color table and
alias indices to hold the default values in the `RenderSettings` class.
This default set is initially populated at startup with the user's
chosen color scheme, but can also potentially be updated if the user
changes their settings while a session is already in progress.
When we receive an `RIS` request, we just copy the default values back
over the active settings, and refresh the renderer.
## Validation Steps Performed
I've manually tested both OpenConsole and Windows Terminal by changing
my color scheme programmatically, and then confirming that the original
colors are restored when an `RIS` sequence is received.
I've also added some basic unit tests that check both the color aliases
and color table are restored by `RIS`.
## PR Checklist
- [x] Tests added/passed
The underlying issue is that the "Pane" is used both as a model and as
a UI element and so a pane loses its content as soon as it is closed,
but the tree only gets reordered after the animation has finished.
This PR is truly just a hotfix, because it doesn't solve this issue,
it only adds checks to the function that crashes.
Closes#17869Closes#17871
## Validation Steps Performed
* `Split pane` a few times
* Run the "Close all other panes" action
* Doesn't crash ✅
PackageES is deprecated by known scourge-on-earth OneBranch, and is now
the cause of some non-compliance.
I got permission from them to open-source it, so that's coming next.
For now, we can just depend on a package based on our code based on
theirs.
Tested and working for C++ (DLL, EXE), C#, NuGet and MSIX.
## Summary of the Pull Request
This commit fixes the middle mouse button handler. The `PointerReleased` callback is registered, but it is not operational because, on the Release event, the mouse button is no longer pressed. We need to track its state and act accordingly.
Issue was introduced by commit 05e7ea1423, which changed the event handler from `PointerPressed` to `PointerReleased`, rendering it inoperative. Instead, the default handler is used. The main issue is that when the close button is hidden with the `showCloseButton` option, the default handler no longer closes the tab on middle mouse clicks.
Also made it consistent with the Settings tab, which was never converted to `PointerReleased` and is still handled with a custom handler.
## References and Relevant Issues
Related commit 05e7ea1423
## Validation Steps Performed
I've been using this commit locally for quite some time, figured out I might as well share it.
Added tab color indicator for the tab switch menu. Tab color indicators
have the same color as the background color of the tabs. If a tab has
the default background color, the indicator is not shown in the tab
switch menu.
Closes#17465
By translating the clip rectangle into a source-relative coordinate
space we can calculate the intersection that must be copied
much much more easily. I should've done that from the start.
Closes#17801
## Validation Steps Performed
* Test code provided in #17801
Under ConPTY we don't load any user settings. `SetUpConsole` notes:
> If we are [ConPTY], we don't want to load any user settings,
> because that could result in some strange rendering results [...]
This enables deduplication by default, which I figured wouldn't cause
any regressions since it's a user-controllable setting anyway, while
it's clearly something the average user wants enabled, for the same
reason that PSReadLine has HistoryNoDuplicates enabled by default.
Closes#17797
## Validation Steps Performed
* Launch conhost, enter 2 commands, press F7, select the older one,
press Enter, press F7. 2 entries ✅
* Launch WT, enter 2 commands, press F7, select the older one,
press Enter, press F7. 2 entries ✅
`GetChar` checks if the vkey is VK_ESCAPE. `CharToKeyEvents` however
tries really hard to figure out the vkeys of all characters.
To avoid these issues all we need to do is to simply use the existing
`WriteString` function we already use for all other VT responses.
If it's good for conhost responses, it's good for ConPTY responses.
Additionally, this removes another `IsVtInputEnabled` which was
redundant with `WriteString` which worked exactly the same internally.
Closes#17813Closes#17851
Probably also related to #17823
## Validation Steps Performed
* Wrote a small app to send and receive a DA1 request. It works ✅
* WSL already worked to begin with (and still works now) ✅
* No double-encoding of mouse input events ✅
## Summary of the Pull Request
When an app makes a VT request that returns a `DCS` response, and it
hasn't also enabled VT input mode, the new passthrough implementation
loses that response. All the app receives is an `Alt`+`\` key press
triggered by the `ST` terminator. This PR fixes that issue.
## References and Relevant Issues
This is one of the unresolved issues tracked in #17643.
## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments
The way `DCS` sequences are handled in the input state machine engine is
by returning a nullptr from `ActionDcsDispatch`, which tells the state
machine to ignore that content. But the sequence is still buffered, and
when the `ST` terminator is eventually received, that buffer is flushed,
which passes the whole thing through to the app.
Originally this only worked when VT input mode was enabled, otherwise
the `ST` sequence is converted into a key press, and the buffered `DCS`
content is lost. The way it works now is we set a flag when the `DCS`
introducer is received, and if that flag is set when the `ST` arrives,
we know to trigger a flush rather a key press.
## Validation Steps Performed
I've tested a `DA3` request from the cmd shell (i.e. `echo ^[[=c`), and
confirmed that now works as expected. I've also hacked Windows Terminal
to disable win32-input mode, so I could check how it works with conpty
clients generating standard VT input, and confirmed that an `Alt`+`\`
keypress is still translated correctly.
Worked with @ekoschik on this one.
## Bug the first: the MSAL window `ixptools` spawns
> The auth prompt in pwsh.exe is disabling the terminal window while its
opened and re-enabling it when the window closes. BUT it is enabling
Terminal after dismissing itself, instead of before, which means
terminal is disabled when activated.
>
> Terminal wants focus on the ISLAND window (a grandchild; island is
parented to bridge, which is parented to terminal’s TLW). When it is
activated, it gets a `WM_SETFOCUS` (in response to DefWindowProc
`WM_ACTIVATE`). From `WM_SETFOCUS` it calls `SetFocus` on the bridge
window, and similarly the bridge calls `SetFocus` on the island.
>
> If the TLW is disabled, these `SetFocus` calls fail (see [this
check](#internal-link-redacted) in `SetFocus`). In the case above, this
leaves Terminal’s TLW as focus, and it doesn’t handle keyboard input.
Note that the window IS foreground/active, but because focus is not on
the island it doesn’t see the keyboard input. Another thing to note is
that clicking on the space to the right of the tabs does NOT revive
keyboard input, but clicking on the tabs or main area does.
> **I recommend having the TLW handle WM_ENABLE and call SetFocus on the
island window.**
And guess what, that works!
## Bug the second: When sublime text is the git `EDITOR`, it doesn't
toss focus back to the Terminal
> In this case, Sublime is calling SFW on the pseudo console window. I
don’t have its code, but it is presumably doing something like
SetForegroundWindow(GetConsoleWindow()). This queues an event to the
pseudo window, and when that event is processed the pseudo window
becomes the active and focus window on the queue (which is shared with
Terminal).
>
> The sublime window dismisses itself and does the above SFW call.
Dismissing immediately activates the Terminal TLW, which does the
triple-focus dance (TLW sets focus on itself, then bridge, then island).
This completes but is overwritten immediately when the pseudo window
activates itself. Note that the pseudo window is active at this point
(not the terminal window).
> **I recommend having the Pseudo console window handle WM_ACTIVATE by
calling SetFocus on the island window (and not passing the message to
DefWindowProc).**
And guess what, that works!
----
Closes#15956 (I did test this)
This might be related to #13388, we'll have folks try canary and check
Spacing marks are called so, because they have a positive advance
width, unlike their non-spacing neighbors (as the name indicates).
After this we stop assigning such gc=Mc codepoints a zero width.
Closes#17810
## Summary of the Pull Request
Add action IDs to the default commands for color selection
## Validation Steps Performed
Color selection commands now show up in the command palette
## PR Checklist
- [x] Closes#17819
- [ ] Tests added/passed
- [ ] Documentation updated
- If checked, please file a pull request on [our docs
repo](https://github.com/MicrosoftDocs/terminal) and link it here: #xxx
- [ ] Schema updated (if necessary)
`ResizeWindow` event in `TerminalApi` is handled and bubbled to
`TerminalApi->ControlCore->TermControl->TerminalPage->AppHost`. Resizing
is accepted only if the window is not in fullscreen or quake mode, and
has 1 tab and pane.
Relevant issues: #5094
This shortens VtPipeTerm quite a bit, which used to have various debug
flags and modes. I kept the `--out` flag to redirect the output to a
file, but I removed the `--debug` (pipe the output through WSL and
show escape sequences visually) and `--headless` (hide conpty) flags.
I did this, because VtPipeTerm always used the system ConPTY API
but I needed it to use my local OpenConsole. I also wanted it to
use overlapped IO for testing but found that it was too difficult
to refactor make that work.
I also noticed that the project was the only holdout for
`conpty.h` which had to be kept in sync with `winconpty.h`.
## Summary of the Pull Request
When a VT title sequence sets the title to a blank string, that is meant
to trigger a reset to the default starting value. This used to work in
the past because the blank value was dealt with by conhost, so Windows
Terminal never received a blank title, but that's no longer the case
with the new VT passthrough. This PR fixes the issue by getting Windows
Terminal to handle the blank title strings itself.
## References and Relevant Issues
VT passthrough was introduced in PR #17510.
## Validation Steps Performed
I've manually verified that the `OSC 0`, `OSC 2`, and `DECSWT` sequences
now correctly reset the title when passed a blank title string.
## PR Checklist
- [x] Closes#17800
This adds logic to get the DA1 report from the hosting terminal on
startup. We then use the information to figure out if it supports
rectangular area operations. If so, we can use DECCRA/DECFRA to
implement ScrollConsoleScreenBuffer.
This additionally changes `ScrollConsoleScreenBuffer` to always
forbid control characters as the fill character, even in conhost
(via `VtIo::SanitizeUCS2`). My hope is that this makes the API
more consistent and robust as it avoids another source for
invisible control characters in the text buffer.
Part of #17643
## Validation Steps Performed
* New tests ✅
Adds functionality throughout the settings model to keep track of which
settings have been set.
There are two entry points:
- AppLogic.cpp: this is where we perform a settings reload by loading
the JSON
- MainPage.cpp: this is where the Save button is clicked in the settings
UI
Both of these entry points call into
`CascadiaSettings::LogSettingChanges()` where we aggregate the list of
changes (specifically, _which_ settings changed, not _what_ their value
is).
Just about all of the settings model objects now have a
`LogSettingChanges(std::set& changes, std::string_view context)` on
them.
- `changes` is where we aggregate all of the changes to. In it being a
set, we don't need to worry about duplicates and can do things like
iterate across all of the profiles.
- `context` prepends a string to the setting. This'll allow us to better
identify where a setting was changes (i.e. "global.X" are global
settings). We also use this to distinguish between settings set in the
~base layer~ profile defaults vs individual profiles.
The change log in each object is modified via two ways:
- `LayerJson()` changes: this is useful for detecting JSON changes! All
we're doing is checking if the setting has a value (due to inheritance,
just about everything is an optional here!). If the value is set, we add
the json key to the change log
- `INHERITABLE_SETTING_WITH_LOGGING` in IInheritable.h: we already use
this macro to define getters and setters. This new macro updates the
setter to check if the value was set to something different. If so, log
it!
Other notes:
- We're not distinguishing between `defaultAppearance` and
`unfocusedAppearance`
- We are distinguishing between `profileDefaults` and `profile` (any
other profile)
- New Tab Menu Customization:
- we really just care about the entry types. Handled in
`GlobalAppSettings`
- Font:
- We still have support for legacy values here. We still want to track
them, but just use the modern keys.
- `Theme`:
- We don't do inheritance here, so we have to approach it differently.
During the JSON load, we log each setting. However, we don't have
`LayerJson`! So instead, do the work in `CascadiaSettings` and store the
changes there. Note that we don't track any changes made via setters.
This is fine for now since themes aren't even in the settings UI, so we
wouldn't get much use out of it anyways.
- Actions:
- Actions are weird because we can have nested and iterable actions too,
but `ActionsAndArgs` as a whole add a ton of functionality. I handled it
over in `Command::LogSettingChanges` and we generally just serialize it
to JSON to get the keys. It's a lot easier than dealing with the object
model.
Epic: #10000
Auto-Save (ish): #12424
This is particularly relevant to pwsh with the "ghost text" enabled. In
that scenario, pwsh writes out the predicted command to the right of the
cursor. With `showSuggestions(useCommandline=true)`, we'd auto-include
that text in the filter, and that was effectively useless.
This instead defaults us to not use anything to the right of the cursor
(inclusive) for what we consider "the current commandline"
closes#17772
1. Don't crash on a cmdpal "duplicate pane" of a snippets pane
* Found while trying to solve bug the third.
* "Duplicate pane" with a snippets pane would crash. This was due to us
attempting to `PreviewText` when there was no buffer yet.
(`_activeBuffer()` strikes again)
2. dismiss the preview from cmdpal correctly too
* Again while looking for part the third, I hit this
* I have a `sendInput(input: "a")` command. This is the first command in
the palette. And opening a new pane would... preview that command in the
new pane? weird. Moving the line in `CommandPalette::_close` fixes this
3. Don't crash when we're restoring a snippets pane and there's a bunch
of windows
* This was the real bug I was trying to fix
* Looks like if you have enough panes & windows, there's enough of a
delay between ctoring a snippets pane and actually calling
`_UpdateSettings` on it, that the XAML loads and tries to bind to
`_allTasks`, which _hadn't been constructed yet_
* closes#17793
This PR clones `winrt::fire_and_forget` and replaces the uncaught
exception handler with one that logs instead of terminating.
My hope is that this removes one source of random crashes.
## Validation Steps Performed
I added a `THROW_HR` to `TermControl::UpdateControlSettings`
before and after the suspension point and ensured the application
won't crash anymore.
* Repurposes `_sendInputToConnection` to send output to the connection
no matter whether the terminal is read-only or not.
Now `SendInput` is the function responsible for the UI handling.
* Buffers responses in a VT string into a single string
before sending it as a response all at once.
This reduces the chances for the UI thread to insert cursor positions
and similar into the input pipe, because we're not constantly unlocking
the terminal lock anymore for every response. The only way now that
unrelated inputs are inserted into the input pipe is because the VT
requests (e.g. DA1, DSR, etc.) are broken up across >1 reads.
This also fixes VT responses in read-only panes.
Closes#17775
## Validation Steps Performed
* Repeatedly run `echo ^[[c` in cmd.
DA1 responses don't stack & always stay the same ✅
* Run nvim in WSL. Doesn't deadlock when pasting 1MB. ✅
* Run the repro from #17775, which requests a ton of OSC 4
(color palette) responses. Jiggle the cursor on top of the window.
Responses never get split up. ✅
I guess I didn't realize that `SendCharEvent` could get called before `Create`. In that scenario, `enter` would hit the automark codepath (due to #17761), then crash because there was no text buffer.
Pretty easy to prevent.
Closes#17776
I used this very bad regex to try and find all the `\x1b`'s in ScreenBufferTests that weren't in a ProcessString call:
```
(?<!ProcessString.*)\x1b\[
```
And these looked like the ones that were the only violations.
Closes#17736
## Summary of the Pull Request
Improves Quick Fix's suggestions to use WinGet API and actually query
winget for packages based on the missing command.
To interact with the WinGet API, we need the
`Microsoft.WindowsPackageManager.ComInterop` NuGet package.
`Microsoft.WindowsPackageManager.ComInterop.Additional.targets` is used
to copy over the winmd into CascadiaPackage. The build variable
`TerminalWinGetInterop` is used to import the package properly.
`WindowsPackageManagerFactory` is used as a centralized way to generate
the winget objects. Long-term, we may need to do manual activation for
elevated sessions, which this class can easily be extended to support.
In the meantime, we'll just use the normal `winrt::create_instance` on
all sessions.
In `TerminalPage`, we conduct the search asynchronously when a missing
command was found. Search results are limited to 20 packages. We try to
retrieve packages with the following filters set, then fallback into the
next step:
1. `PackageMatchField::Command`,
`PackageFieldMatchOption::StartsWithCaseInsensitive`
2. `PackageMatchField::Name`,
`PackageFieldMatchOption::ContainsCaseInsensitive`
3. `PackageMatchField::Moniker`,
`PackageFieldMatchOption::ContainsCaseInsensitive`
This aligns with the Microsoft.WinGet.CommandNotFound PowerShell module
([link to relevant
code](9bc83617b9/src/WinGetCommandNotFoundFeedbackPredictor.cs (L165-L202))).
Closes#17378Closes#17631
Support for elevated sessions tracked in #17677
## References
-
https://github.com/microsoft/winget-cli/blob/master/src/Microsoft.Management.Deployment/PackageManager.idl:
winget object documentation
## Validation Steps Performed
- [X] unelevated sessions --> winget query performed and presented
- [X] elevated sessions --> nothing happens (got rid of `winget install
{}` suggestion)
Pretty obvious in retrospect. If there's no results, then we need to
preview
_nothing_ to make sure that we clear out any old previews.
Closes#17773
Additionally, while I was here:
I realized why it seems like the selected item is so wacky when you
first open the sxnui:
* on launch we're not scrolling to the bottom item (which makes it
awkward in bottom up mode)
* when we filter the list, we're maintaining the selection _index_, not
the selection _item_.
Alas, that second part is... shockingly bodgy.
PR #10642 and #11290 introduced an adjustment for the cursor position
used to generate VT mouse mode events.
One of the decisions made in those PRs was to only send coordinates
where Y was >= 0, so if you were off the top of the screen you wouldn't
get any events. However, terminal emulators are expected to send
_clamped_ events when the mouse is off the screen. This decision broke
clamping Y to 0 when the mouse was above the screen.
The other decision was to only adjust the Y coordinate if the core's
`ScrollOffset` was greater than 0. It turns out that `ScrollOffset` _is
0_ when you are scrolled all the way back in teh buffer. With this
check, we would clamp coordinates properly _until the top line of the
scrollback was visible_, at which point we would send those coordinates
over directly. This resulted in the same weird behavior as observed in
#10190.
I've fixed both of those things. Core is expected to receive negative
coordinates and clamp them to the viewport. ScrollOffset should never be
below 0, as it refers to the top visible buffer line.
In addition to that, #17744 uncovered that we were allowing
autoscrolling to happen even when VT mouse events were being generated.
I added a way for `ControlInteractivity` to halt further event
processing. It's crude.
Refs #10190Closes#17744
We were erroneously eating Alt followed by VK_ADD. This change makes
sure we cache key presses and releases that happen once a numpad
composition is active so that we can send them when you release Alt.
Right now, we only send them when you release Alt after composing Alt
and VK_ADD (entering hex mode) and only if you haven't inserted an
actual hex numpad code. This does mean that `Alt VK_ADD 0 0 H I` will
result in an input of "+hi". That... seems like a small price to pay for
Alt VK_ADD working again.
Closes#17762
#17510 made it so that VT requests like DA1 are passed through to the
hosting terminal and so conhost stopped responding to them on its own.
But since our input parser doesn't support proper passthrough (yet),
it swallowed the response coming from the terminal.
To solve this issue, this PR repurposes the existing boolean return
values to indicate to the parser whether the current sequence should
be flushed to the dispatcher as-is. The output parser always returns
true (success) and leaves its pass-through handler empty, while the
input parser returns false for sequences it doesn't expect.
## Validation Steps Performed
* Launch cmd
* Press `Ctrl+[`, `[`, `c`, `Enter` (= `^[[c` = DA1 request)
* DA1 response is visible ✅
This pull request adds support for setting and querying the selection
color with `OSC 17`.
To make this possible, I had to move selection color down into the color
table where it always belonged. This lets us get rid of the special
`SetSelectionColor` method from the surface of AtlasEngine, and reunites
selection colors with the rest of the special colors.
When you close a window, it naturally loses focus.
We were trying to use members of the control to update its appearance on
focus loss after it got torn down.
Closes#17520
Swapped the `swprintf_s` with no failure checks against a
`str_printf_nothrow` with checks. I also deduplicated the
`CreateProcess` calls since they're mostly identical.
Closes#16860
Some simple logic to report whenever an action has successfully occurred
(and what ShortcutAction was used).
Note, there will be some false positives here from startup. I noticed we
get a `newTab` on launch. This is probably a result of restoring the
window layout of the previous session since we're using ActionAndArgs
for that.
Same justification as #17749.
We will revert this when either OneBranch Custom Pools become
fit-for-purpose or they upgrade to VS 17.11. Or the heat death of the
universe.
This pull request adds support for querying all of the "dynamic
resource" colors (foreground, background, cursor) as well as the entire
color palette using OSC 4, 10, 11 and 12 with the `?` color specifier.
To ease integration and to make it easier to extend later, I have
consolidated `SetDefaultForeground`, `SetDefaultBackground` and
`SetCursorColor` into one function `SetXtermColorResource`, plus its
analog `RequestXtermColorResource`.
Those functions will map xterm resource OSC numbers to color table
entries and optionally color _alias_ entries using a constant table. The
alias mappings are required to support reassigning the default
foreground and background to their indexed entries after a `DECAC`.
While there are only three real entries in the mapping table right now,
I have designs on bringing in selection background (xterm "highlight")
and foreground (xterm "highlightText").
We can also extend this to support resetting via OSC 110-119. However,
at the adapter layer we do not have the requisite information to restore
any of the colors (even the cursor color!) to the user's defaults.
`OSC 10` and `OSC 11` queries report the final values of
`DECAC`-reassigned entries, under the assumption that an application
asking for them wants to make a determination regardless of their
internal meaning to us (that is: they read through the aliased color to
its final destination in the color palette.)
I've tested this with lsix, which detects the background color before
generating sixel previews. It works great!
ConPTY does not currently pass OSC sequences received on the input
handle, so work was required to make it do so.
Closes#3718
Fixes a regression from the actions MVVM change in #14292 - attempting
to overwrite a keybinding was displaying a warning but propagating the
change before the user acknowledged it.
The overwrite key binding warning in the SUI works like before
Closes#17754
As we discussed in bug bash.
There's really no downside to us enabling it by default (and leaving
showMarksOnScrollbar: false). It'll mark lines as "prompts" when the
user hits enter. This will have a couple good side effects:
* When folks have right-aligned prompts (like, from oh-my-posh), the
`enter` will terminate where shell integration thinks the command is, so
that the right-prompt doesn't end up in the commandline history
* the scrollToMark actions will Just Work without any other shell
integration
Closes#17632
By manually setting the `_windowTarget` to `0`, we can make sure to toss
`x-save` commandlines at the current terminal window (so long as there
is one).
Edge cases:
* You passed other subcommands with `x-save`: Well, we'll do whatever we
would have normally done for multiple subcommands. We won't `x-save` in
the current window, we'll obey your settings. That seems to make sense
* You ran `wt x-save` without an open Terminal window: We'll open a
terminal window during the process of handling it. That seems sensible.
Closes#17366
In #16886, the key for the nested action got renamed from `Split
Pane...` to `Split pane`. This accidentally caused a collision because
now there's two actions with the same name! The settings model then
prefers the user's action over the one defined in defaults.json, thus
completely hiding the nested version.
I tried to balance the stylistic recommendations from #16846 (mainly
[this
comment](https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/issues/16846#issuecomment-2005007519)
since it gave some excellent examples) while trying to maintain muscle
memory as much as possible (with similar substring sequences). There was
also one case where we still used "the tab" so I removed the "the" for
consistency.
Side effect of #16886 which closed#16846Closes#17294Closes#17684
Does what it says on the tin.
Part of #17737
## Validation Steps Performed
* In WSL run
`printf "\e[?9001h"; sleep 1; printf "\e[?9001l"; read`
* Wait 1s and press Enter
* Run `showkey -a`
* Esc works ✅
I don't know what has changed between #17450 and now, but that fix
doesn't seem necessary anymore. If you add this action:
```json
{
"keys": "ctrl+a",
"command":
{
"action": "splitPane",
"commandline": "cmd /c exit"
}
}
```
and repeatedly spam Ctrl-A it used to lead to crashes. That doesn't
happen anymore, because some other PR must've fixed that.
Reverting #17450 fixes the issue found in #17578: Because the content
pointer didn't get reset to null anymore it meant that the root
pane retained the pointer after a split. After closing the split off
pane, it would assign the remaining one back to the root, which would
cause the still existing content pointer to be closed. That pointer
is potentially the same as the remaining pane and so no close events
would get received anymore.
Closes#17578
## Validation Steps Performed
* Add the above action and spam it ✅
* Start with an empty window, split pane, type `exit` in the new pane
then type it in the original pane. It closes the window ✅
## Summary of the Pull Request
Fixes the `RangeFromPoint` API such that we're now properly locking when
we attempt to retrieve the viewport data. This also corrects the
conversion from `UiaPoint` (screen position) to buffer coordinates
(buffer cell).
Closes#17579
## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments
- `UiaTextRangeBase::Initialize(UiaPoint)`:
- reordered logic to clamp to client area first, then begin conversion
to buffer coordinates
- properly lock when retrieving the viewport data
- updated `_TranslatePointToScreen` and `_TranslatePointFromScreen` to
use `&` instead of `*`
- we weren't properly updating the parameter before
- `TermControlUiaTextRange::_TranslatePointFromScreen()`
- `includeOffsets` was basically copied over from
`_TranslatePointToScreen`. The math itself was straight up wrong since
we had to do it backwards.
## Validation Steps Performed
✅ Moved WT to top-left of monitor, then used inspect.exe to call
`RangeFromPoint` API when mouse cursor is on top-left buffer cell (also
meticulously stepped through the two functions ensuring everything was
correct).
`ProcessString` may delete the ASB and cause a dangling screen info
pointer. As such, we must avoid using the pointer after the call.
Closes#17709
## Validation Steps Performed
I couldn't repro the issue.
* Adds a check whether the thread dispatcher is already null.
(See code comments.)
* Moves the `_settings` to only happen on the UI thread.
Anything else wouldn't be thread safe.
Closes#17620
## Validation Steps Performed
Not reproducible. 🚫
Once all applications that have received a `WM_ENDSESSION` message
have returned from processing said message, windows will terminate
all processes. This forces us to process the message synchronously.
This meant that this issue was timing dependent. If Windows Terminal
was quick at persisting buffers and you had some other application that
was slow to shut down (e.g. Steam), you would never see this issue.
Closes#17179Closes#17250
## Validation Steps Performed
* Set up a lean Hyper-V VM for fast reboots
* `Set-VMComPort <vm> 1 \\.pipe\\<pipe>`
* Hook up WIL to write to COM1
* Add a ton of debug prints all over the place
* Read COM output with Putty for hours
* RTFM, and notice that the `WM_ENDSESSION` documentation states
"the session can end any time after all applications
have returned from processing this message"
* Be very very sad ✅
* Fix it
* Rebooting now shows on COM1 that persistence runs ✅
* Windows get restored after reboot ✅
## Summary of the Pull Request
When conhost receives input from a conpty connection, and that input
arrives in a block larger than our 4K buffer, we can end up with a VT
sequence that's split at the buffer boundary. Previously that could
result in the start of the sequence being dropped, and the remaining
characters being interpreted as individual key presses.
This PR attempts to fix the issue by caching the unprocessed characters
from the start of the sequence, and then combining them with the second
half of the sequence when it's later received.
## Validation Steps Performed
I've confirmed that pasting into vim now works correctly with the sample
data from issue #16655. I've also tested with a `DECCTR` report larger
than 4K which would previously have been corrupted, and which now works
as expected.
## PR Checklist
- [x] Closes#16655
With the merge of #17638, selections are now accumulated early in the
rendering process. This allows Atlas, which currently makes decisions
about cell foreground/background at the time of text rendering,
awareness of the selection ranges *before* text rendering begins.
As a result, we can now paint the selection into the background and
foreground bitmaps. We no longer need to overlay a rectangle, or series
of rectangles, on top of the rendering surface and alpha blend the
selection color onto the final image.
As a reminder, "alpha selection" was always a stopgap because we didn't
have durable per-cell foreground and background customization in the
original DxEngine.
Selection foregrounds are not customizable, and will be chosen using the
same color distancing algorithm as the cursor. We can make them
customizable "easily" (once we figure out the schema for it) for #3580.
`ATLAS_DEBUG_SHOW_DIRTY` was using the `Selection` shading type to draw
colored regions. I didn't want to break that, so I elected to rename the
`Selection` shading type to `FilledRect` and keep its value. It helps
that the shader didn't have any special treatment for
`SHADING_TYPE_SELECTION`.
This fixes the entire category of issues created by selection being an
80%-opacity white rectangle. However, given that it changes the imputed
colors of the text it will reveal `SGR 8` concealed/hidden characters.
Refs #17355
Refs #14859
Refs #11181
Refs #8716
Refs #4971Closes#3561
Now that the store displays changelogs, it seems unfair for us to not
put something in here.
These are intended to give a rough idea, not to be perfect, as they are
not the product of my hours of changelog writing (since I am lazy and
put that off until the day of release 🫣)
When we have a series of image slices of differing widths, which also
don't align with the cell boundaries, we can get rounding errors in the
scaling which makes the different slices appear misaligned.
This PR fixes the issue by removing the 4 pixel width alignment that was
enforced in the `ImageSlice` class, since that's not actually necessary
when the pixels themselves are already 4 bytes in size. And without
that, the widths should be correctly aligned with the cell boundaries.
## References and Relevant Issues
The initial Sixel implementation was added in PR #17421.
## Validation Steps Performed
I've confirmed that this fixes the rendering glitches reported in
#17711, and all my existing Sixel tests still work as expected.
Closes#17711
`HSTRING` does not permit strings that aren't null-terminated.
As such we'll simply use a plain char array which compiles down to
a `UINT32` and `wchar_t*` pointer pair. Unfortunately, cppwinrt uses
`char16_t` in place of `wchar_t`, and also offers no trivial conversion
between `winrt::array_view` and `std::wstring_view` either.
As such, most of this PR is about explicit type casting.
Closes#17697
## Validation Steps Performed
* Patch the `DeviceAttributes` implementation in `adaptDispatch.cpp`
to respond like this:
```cpp
_api.ReturnResponse({L"ABCD", 3});
```
* Open a WSL shell and execute this:
```sh
printf "\e[c"; read
```
* Doesn't crash ✅
This PR introduces the framework for the `DECRQTSR` sequence which is
used to query terminal state reports. But for now I've just implemented
the `DECCTR` color table report, which provides a way for applications
to query the terminal's color scheme.
## References and Relevant Issues
This is the counterpart to the the `DECRSTS` sequence, which is used to
restore a color table report. That was implemented in PR #13139, but it
only became practical to report the color table once conpty passthrough
was added in PR #17510.
## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments
This sequence has the option of reporting the colors as either HLS or
RGB, but in both cases the resolution is lower than 24 bits, so the
colors won't necessarily round-trip exactly when saving and restoring.
The HLS model in particular can accumulate rounding errors over time.
## Validation Steps Performed
I've added a basic unit test that confirms the colors are reported as
expected for both color models. The color values in these tests were
obtained from color reports on a real VT525 terminal.
## PR Checklist
- [x] Tests added/passed
We got some new icons for Developer Command Prompt and Developer
PowerShell from our friends over on Visual Studio!
This pull request includes them in the package, and fixes up the VS
dynamic profiles to reset any icons that matched the old paths.
This may be a minor breaking change for user settings, but we're making
the assumption that if they didn't change their VS profile icons from
the defaults, they probably want to follow us to the new defaults.
To prevent anything like this from happening again, we're going to stop
serializing icons for stub profiles.
I've also included a VS version of the PowerShell "black" icon which is
currently unused, but can be used in the future for PS7+-based VS Dev
Shell.
Closes#17627
`RealUnicodeToFalseUnicode` was described as:
> This routine converts a unicode string into the correct characters
> for an OEM (cp 437) font. This code is needed because the gdi glyph
> mapper converts unicode to ansi using codepage 1252 to index font.
> This is how the data is stored internally.
In other words, it takes a UCS2 string, translates it to the current
codepage and translates it back to UCS2 in the US version of Windows.
In the "eastern" DBCS version it "reinterprets" the DBCS string as
`CP_USA` (a particularly weird quirk).
The original implementation used to do this translation at every
opportunity where text went into or out of conhost.
The translation was weird, but it was consistent.
In Windows 10 RS1 conhost got a new UCS2-aware text buffer and
this translation was removed from most places, as the text buffer
was converted to store proper UCS2. This broke the entire concept
of the translation though. Whatever data you previously wrote with
something like `WriteConsoleOutputCharacter` now came back with
something entirely else via `ReadConsoleOutput`.
In other words, I believe past RS1 there was technically never any
point in "munging" `CHAR_INFO`s, as this only covered 2 API functions.
Still, this does mean that this PR represents an API breaking change.
It's a minor one though, because it only affects 2 API functions.
And more importantly, it's a necessary breaking change as we move
further and further away from correlating codepoint and column counts.
## Validation Steps Performed
* Remaining tests pass ✅
This removes the `Terminal::SetViewportPosition` call from session
restoration which was responsible for putting the viewport below
the buffer height and caused the renderer to fail.
In order to prevent such issues in the future, `SetViewportPosition`
now protects itself against out of bounds requests.
Closes#17639
## Validation Steps Performed
* Enable persistence
* Print `big.txt`
* Restart
* Looks good ✅
In #17638, I am moving selection to an earlier phase of rendering (so
that further phases can take it into account). Since I am drafting off
the design of search highlights, one of the required changes is moving
to passing `span`s of `point_span`s around to make selection effectively
zero-copy.
We can't easily have zero-copy selection propagation without caching,
and we can't have caching without mandatory cache invalidation.
This pull request moves both conhost and Terminal to use
`til::generational` for all selection members that impact the ranges
that would be produced from `GetSelectionRects`.
This required a move from `std::optional<>` to a boolean to determine
whether a selection was active in Terminal.
We will no longer regenerate the selection rects from the selection
anchors plus the text buffer *every single frame*.
Apart from being annoying to read, there is one downside.
If you begin a selection on a narrow character, _and that narrow
character later turns into a wide character_, we will show it as
half-selected.
This should be a rare-enough case that we can accept it as a regression.
This simplifies the code (from the perspective of the CPU) by doing
some miniscule-feels-good optimizations like replacing `snprintf` with
regular string concatenation and by doing an actual optimization by
removing the remaining calls to the WinRT `ApplicationModel` namespace.
More importantly however it fixes a bug: The only reason `elevate-shim`
worked at all is because the shell extension passed "wrong" parameters
to `CreateProcess`. Instead of repeating the application path in the
command line argument again, as is convention in C and on Windows, and
getting the 2nd and following parameters as an argument to `wWinMain`,
it used `GetCommandLineW` to get the original, broken command line.
This fixes the issue by passing the application path as the first
argument, which allows `elevate-shim` to be called like any other app.
## Validation Steps Performed
* Deploy WT and restart explorer
* Clicking "Open in Terminal (Dev)" works ✅
* Clicking "Open in Terminal (Dev)" while holding Ctrl+Shift
opens WT as admin ✅
The only reason we had the `SetTextAttributes` method in `ITerminalApi`
was to allow for conhost to remap the default color attributes when the
VT PowerShell quirk was active. Since that quirk has now been removed,
there's no need for this API anymore.
## References and Relevant Issues
The PowerShell quirk was removed in PR #17666.
## Validation Steps Performed
I've had to update all the attribute tests in adapterTest to manually
check the expected attributes, since those checks were previously being
handled in a `SetTextAttributes` mock which no longer exists.
I've also performed some manual tests of the VT attribute operations to
double check that they're still working as expected.
Between fmt 7.1.3 and 11.0.2 a lot has happened. `wchar_t` support is
now more limited and implicit conversions don't work anymore.
Furthermore, even the non-`FMT_COMPILE` API is now compile-time checked
and so it fails to work in our UI code which passes `hstring` format
strings which aren't implicitly convertible to the expected type.
`fmt::runtime` was introduced for this but it also fails to work for
`hstring` parameters. To solve this, a new `RS_fmt` macro was added
to abstract the added `std::wstring_view` casting away.
Finally, some additional changes to reduce `stringstream` usage
have been made, whenever `format_to`, etc., is available.
This mostly affects `ActionArgs.cpp`.
Closes#16000
## Validation Steps Performed
* Compiles ✅
* Settings page opens ✅
This sends a telemetry event if a session is interacted with.
Specifically, key events are essential to have an interactive session in
Windows Terminal, so we're tracking sessions that have had a key down
event.
The answerback feature allows for the user to define a message that the
terminal will transmit to the host whenever an `ENQ` (enquiry) control
character is received.
## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments
In Windows Terminal, the message can be configured at the profile level
of the settings file, as a string property named `AnswerbackMessage`.
In ConHost, the message can be configured in the registry, again as a
string value with the name `AnswerbackMessage`.
## Validation Steps Performed
I've confirmed that the control is working as intended in both Windows
Terminal and ConHost using Vttest.
Closes#11946
In several places the old conhost codebase appears to assume that any
wide glyph is represented by two codepoints. This is probably an
artifact of the ASCII/DBCS split that conhost used to have.
When conhost got merged into a single UCS2-aware application,
this artifact was apparently never properly resolved.
To my knowledge there are at least two places where this assumption
exists: The clipboard code which translates non-wide non-ascii
characters to Alt-numpad sequences, and this code. Both are wrong.
This is because in a Unicode-context there's no correlation between
the number of codepoints and the width of the glyph, even with UCS2.
In a post-UCS2-world the correct check is for surrogate pairs,
as they must be avoided for the same reason DBCS were avoided.
One could consider this a breaking change of the API,
as this can now result in repeat counts >1 for wide glyphs.
If someone complained about this change in behavior, I'd probably
not change it back, as narrow complex Unicode characters exist too.
This delays the CSI J until we know the new origin of the prompt.
That way it's at the right (reflowed) position.
## Validation Steps Performed
* conhost
* Print a ton of text
* Write a prompt of a hundred chars
* Resize the window very narrow / wide
* Works ✅
* Windows Terminal
* Write a prompt of a hundred chars
* Resize the window very narrow / wide
* Works ✅
This adds an indirection for `_KeyHandler` so that `OnDirectKeyEvent`
can call `_KeyHandler`. This allows us to consistently handle
Alt-key-up events. Then I added custom handling for Alt+ddd (OEM),
Alt+0ddd (ANSI), and Alt+'+'+xxxx (Unicode) sequences, due to the
absence of Alt-key events with xaml islands and our TSF control.
Closes#17327
## Validation Steps Performed
* Tested it according to https://conemu.github.io/en/AltNumpad.html
* Unbind Alt+Space
* Run `showkey -a`
* Alt+Space generates `^[ `
* F7 generates `^[[18~`
## Summary of the Pull Request
Adds a scroll offset to avoid hiding the current search highlight with
the search box.
- Offset is based on the number of rows that the search box takes up.
(I am not totally sure I am calculating this right)
- This won't help when the current highlight is in the first couple
rows of the buffer.
Fixes: #4407
* Added/changed comments as mentioned.
* Improved the ugly `resize_and_overwrite` hack into the STL.
* Add `Write` functions for xterm's window API.
* The only reason we needed a move operator for `VtIo::Writer`
is because we used it in a ternary in `CONSOLE_INFORMATION`.
Ternaries are like if branches with hidden move assignments.
Instead, we simply construct each `Writer` in place.
No ternary = No move = No problems in life.
The best benefit of this is that this makes calling `GetVtWriter`
a hundred times cheaper.
Otherwise, I still need to extend a few tests in `VtIoTests`,
but I'm planning to do that later.
* Every single place that called `read_file_as_utf8_string_if_exists`
would immediately do a `.value_or(std::string{})`.
As such, the function now returns a string directly.
* There was just one caller to `read_file_as_utf8_string`
and it only cared about files that are non-empty.
As such, the specialization got removed.
Both of these make sense to me, as in practice there's seldom
a difference between an empty file and a non-existent one.
## Validation Steps Performed
* Compiles ✅
* Starts ✅
* Deleting the `settings.json` contents triggers a reload ✅
BackendD2D will now draw one extra cell on all sides when rendering the
background, filled with the expected background color, starting at (-1,
-1) to ensure that cell backgrounds do not bleed over the edges of the
viewport where the is swapchain but no content.
Fixes#17672
Roughly 4 years ago we gave Windows Terminal the ability to
differentiate between black/white and the default colors.
One of the victims was PowerShell and most importantly PSReadLine,
which emit SRG 37 & 40 when what they really want is 38 & 48.
We fixed this on our side by adding a shim.
Since the addition of VT passthrough in #17510 we now intentionally
lost the ability to translate VT sequences from one thing to another.
This meant we also lost the ability to do this shim and as such
this PR removes it. Luckily Windows 11 now ships PSReadLine 2.0.0,
which contains a proper fix for this.
Unfortunately, this is not the case for Windows 10, which ships
PSReadLine 2.0.0-beta2. Users affected by this will have to install
a newer version of PSReadLine or use the default black/white theme.
See 1bf4c082b4Closes#13037
This PR adds support for querying the cursor style - technically the
state of the `DECSCUSR` setting - using a `DECRQSS` escape sequence.
## References and Relevant Issues
The initial `DECRQSS` support was added in PR #11152, but it wasn't
practical to report the cursor style until conpty passthrough was added
in PR #17510.
## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments
If the user has chosen a cursor style that isn't one of the shapes
supported by the `DECSCUSR` control, we report those as 0 (i.e. the
default style). That way, if an application later tries to restore the
cursor using the returned value, it should still be reset to its
original state.
I also took the opportunity in this PR to do some refactoring of the
other `DECRQSS` reports, since several of them were using unnecessary
appending that could be simplified to a single `fmt::format` call, or
even just static strings in some cases.
## Validation Steps Performed
I've checked the reports are working as expected in Vttest, and also
added some unit tests.
## PR Checklist
- [x] Tests added/passed
We aren't sure what exactly it is, but on the latest toolchain
this code miscompiles. The fmt call throws an exception because
it supposedly has too few arguments supplied for the format string.
Debugging the issue shows that the `next_arg_id_` internal to `fmt`
is 10000, even though it's parsing the first argument. At that point
it's supposed to be 0. This code hasn't been changed in years.
My hope is that this slight shuffling of the code causes
the issue to go away.
The idea is that we can translate Console API calls directly to VT at
least as well as the current VtEngine setup can. For instance, a call
to `SetConsoleCursorPosition` clearly translates directly to a `CUP`
escape sequence. Effectively, instead of translating output
asynchronously in the renderer thread, we'll do it synchronously
right during the Console API call.
Most importantly, the this means that any VT output that an
application generates will now be given to the terminal unmodified.
Aside from reducing our project's complexity quite a bit and opening
the path towards various interesting work like sixels, Device Control
Strings, buffer snapshotting, synchronized updates, and more, it also
improves performance for mixed text output like enwik8.txt in conhost
to 1.3-2x and in Windows Terminal via ConPTY to roughly 20x.
This adds support for overlapped IO, because now that output cannot
be "skipped" anymore (VtEngine worked like a renderer after all)
it's become crucial to block conhost as little as possible.
⚠️ Intentionally unresolved changes/quirks:
* To force a delayed EOL wrap to wrap, `WriteCharsLegacy` emits a
`\r\n` if necessary. This breaks text reflow on window resize.
We cannot emit ` \r` the way readline does it, because this would
overwrite the first column in the next row with a whitespace.
The alternative is to read back the affected cell from the buffer
and emit that character and its attributes followed by a `\r`.
I chose to not do that, because buffer read-back is lossy (= UCS2).
Unless the window is resized, the difference is unnoticeable
and historically, conhost had no support for buffer reflow anyway.
* If `ENABLE_VIRTUAL_TERMINAL_PROCESSING` is set while
`DISABLE_NEWLINE_AUTO_RETURN` is reset, we'll blindly replace all
LF with CRLF. This may hypothetically break DCS sequences, but it's
the only way to do this without parsing the given VT string and
thus the only way we can achieve passthrough mode in the future.
* `ENABLE_WRAP_AT_EOL_OUTPUT` is translated to `DECAWM`.
Between Windows XP and Windows 11 21H2, `ENABLE_WRAP_AT_EOL_OUTPUT`
being reset would cause the cursor position to reset to wherever
a write started, _if_ the write, including expanded control chars,
was less than 100 characters long. If it was longer than that,
the cursor position would end up in an effectively random position.
After lengthy research I believe that this is a bug introduced in
Windows XP and that the original intention was for this mode to be
equivalent to `DECAWM`. This is compounded by MSDN's description
(emphasis mine):
> If this mode is disabled, the **last character** in the row is
> overwritten with any subsequent characters.
⚠️ Unresolved issues/quirks:
* Focus/Unfocus events are injected into the output stream without
checking whether the VT output is currently in a ground state.
This may break whatever VT sequence is currently ongoing.
This is an existing issue.
* `VtIo::Writer::WriteInfos` should properly verify the width of
each individual character.
* Using `SetConsoleActiveScreenBuffer` destroys surrogate pairs
and extended (VT) attributes. It could be translated to VT pages
in the long term.
* Similarly, `ScrollConsoleScreenBuffer` results in the same and
could be translated to `DECCRA` and `DECFRA` in the near term.
This is important because otherwise `vim` output may loose
its extended attributes during scrolling.
* Reflowing a long line until it wraps results in the cooked read
prompt to be misaligned vertically.
* `SCREEN_INFORMATION::s_RemoveScreenBuffer` should trigger a
buffer switch similar to `SetConsoleActiveScreenBuffer`.
* Translation of `COMMON_LVB_GRID_HORIZONTAL` to `SGR 53` was dropped
and may be reintroduced alongside `UNDERSCORE` = `SGR 4`.
* Move the `OSC 0 ; P t BEL` sequence to `WriteWindowTitle`
and swap the `BEL` with the `ST` (`ESC \`).
* PowerShell on Windows 10 ships with PSReadLine 2.0.0-beta2
which emits SGR 37/40 instead of 39/49. This results in black
spaces when typing and there's no good way to fix that.
* A test is missing that ensures that `FillConsoleOutputCharacterW`
results in a `CSI n J` during the PowerShell shim.
* A test is missing that ensures that `PtySignal::ClearBuffer`
does not result in any VT being generated.
Closes#262Closes#1173Closes#3016Closes#4129Closes#5228Closes#8698Closes#12336Closes#15014Closes#15888Closes#16461Closes#16911Closes#17151Closes#17313
This fixes a regression caused by 5b44476 which accidentally moved
the two pushes into the if condition.
Closes MSFT:52463679
## Validation Steps Performed
* Enable `Feature_UseNumpadEventsForClipboardInput`
* `cmd`
* `chcp 54936`
* Paste narrow Unicode characters like ①
* It works ✅
Thanks to a string of compiler bugs, we had to use an older container
image that shipped with VS 17.9.
Unfortunately, that container image is falling further and further out
of date. The build agents don't cache it any longer, so they spend 30-45
minutes of every build pulling it from the registry.
With the changes to ConPTY in #17510 removing the need for til::bitmap,
we no longer need to work around the compiler bugs it exposed.
Furthermore, 17.10.6+ has a much more robust and presumably "working"
compiler.
The "copy the remaining attributes" loop assumes that it has full
ownership over the rows that it copies. For that to be true,
we have to of course make sure that the current write-cursor
is at a fresh, new row in the first place.
## Validation Steps Performed
* In a new pwsh tab with 120 colums:
``Write-Host -NoNewline "`e[36m$('a'*120)`e[m"; sleep 10``
* Resize the window wider
* Color doesn't get lost
Regressed in #15500, incorrectly fixed in #17332, exposed by #17583.
My ineptitude on full display. If this isn't the last cursor
invalidation bug I'm going to cry.
Closes#17615
## Validation Steps Performed
* cmd.exe
* a directory with 6 files
* 80x24 viewport
* run `cls`
* run `dir` twice
This PR adds the ability to load snippets from the CWD into the
suggestions UI.
If shell integration is disabled, then we only ever think the CWD for a
pane is it's `startingDirectory`. So, in the default case, users can
still stick snippets into the root of their git repos, and have the
Terminal load them automatically (for profiles starting in the root of
their repo).
If it's enabled though, we'll always try to load snippets from the CWD
of the shell.
* We cache the actions into a separate map of CWD -> actions. This lets
us read the file only the first time we see a dir.
* We clear that cache on settings reload
* We only load `sendInput` actions from the `.wt.json`
As spec'd in #17329
* Add a revision to `ImageSlice` so that the renderers
can use it to cache them as bitmaps across frames.
* Hooked up the revision tracking to AtlasEngine to cache the
slices into `Buffer`s so we can own them into the `Present`.
* Hooked up those snapshots to BackendD3D with a straightforward
hashmap -> atlas-rect logic. Just like rendering text.
* Hooked up BackendD2D with a bad, but simple & direct drawing logic.
* Bonus: Modify `ImageSlice` to be returned as a raw pointers
as this helps performance slightly. (Trivial type == good.)
* Bonus: Fixed the `_debugShowDirty` code (disabled by default).
## Validation Steps Performed
* `mpv --really-quiet --vo=sixel foo.mp4` looks good ✅
* Scroll up down & observe dirty rects ✅
`nuget restore` actually runs through MSBuild! However, #15855 added a
dependency from our project on a system-installed _or locally detected_
`vcpkg.targets` (or `.props`).
Our build runs `nuget restore` before finding or installing vcpkg, so
the rules in our project file would try to import vcpkg before it had
been found (or installed).
On build agents with vcpkg installed via the VS workload, this was fine:
we would import the one that came with VS and go on our merry way. On
build agents where it needs to be installed locally, it could not be
imported.
The fix in this PR is to install/bootstrap vcpkg before running nuget.
I tried to isolate the vcpkg rules to only run _in the absence of
nuget_, but that didn't work.
Removes the GitHub action that provides the functionality for the
similar issues bot prototype. We can onboard to the more official
prototype instead to conserve functionality.
This regressed in #15707. By having the `viewportOffset` on the
`Settings` object we accidentally invalidate the entire viewport
every time it scrolls. That doesn't break anything of course,
but it's better to prevent this.
This PR additionally contains a fix for clamping the y coordinates
coming from `Renderer`: Since `viewportCellCount.y` is a count and
thus exclusive, but clamp's max is inclusive, we must subtract 1.
This pull request removes the following vendored open source, in favor
of getting it from vcpkg:
- CLI11 2.4
- jsoncpp 1.9
- fmt 7.1.3
- gsl 3.1 (not vendored, but submoduled--arguably worse!)
Now that Visual Studio 2022 includes a built-in workload for vcpkg, the
onboarding process is much smoother. Terminal should only require the
vcpkg workload.
I've added some build rules that detect vcpkg via VS and via the user's
environment before falling back to a location in the source tree. The CI
pipeline will fall back to installing and bootstrapping vcpkg in
dep/vcpkg if necessary.
Some OSS has not been (and will not be) migrated:
- wyhash: ours is included directly in til/hash
- pcg_random: we have a stripped down copy compared to vcpkg
- stb_rect: vcpkg only ships *all of STB*; ours is a stripped down copy
- chromium numerics: vcpkg does not ship Chromium, especially not this
tiny fraction of Chromium
- dynamic_bitset and libpopcnt: removing in #17510
- interval_tree: no vcpkg equivalent
To support the needs of the inbox Windows build, I've split up our vcpkg
manifest into dependencies for all projects and dependencies just for
Terminal. To support this, we now offer a `terminal` feature. The vcpkg
rules in `common.build.pre.props` are set up to turn it on, whereas the
build rules we eventually write for the OS will not be.
Most of the work is concentrated in `common.build.pre.props`.
Split off from #17510:
* `Viewport::Clamp` used `std::clamp` to calculate the intersection
between two rectangles. That works for exclusive rectangles,
because `.left == .right` indicates an empty rectangle.
But `Viewport` is an inclusive one, and so `.left == .right` is
non-empty. For instance, if the to-be-clamped rect is fully
outside the bounding rect, the result is a 1x1 viewport.
In effect this meant that `Viewport::Clamp` never clamped so far.
* The `targetArea < targetBuffer.size()` check is the wrong way around.
It should be `targetArea > targetBuffer.size()`.
* The `sourceSize` and `targetSize` checks are incorrect, because the
rectangles may be non-empty but outside the valid bounding rect.
* If these sizes were empty, we'd return the requested rectangle which
is a regression since conhost v1 and violates the API contract.
* The `sourceRect` emptiness check is incorrect, because the clamping
logic before it doesn't actually clamp to the bounding rect.
* The entire clamping and iteration logic is just overall too complex.
Adds a keybinding to open the quick fix menu, if one is available. When
the action is used, we also open up the button (if it was collapsed)
because that looks nice.
The `showSuggestions` action is bound to `ctrl+shift+period` by default
to align with VS' "quick actions" feature and VS Code's "quick fix"
feature. This was chosen over binding to `quickFix` because it's more
helpful. The quick fix button is a route for users that prefer to use
the mouse. If users want to add a keybinding to activate the `quickFix`
button, they can do that now.
This PR also performs a bit of miscellaneous polish from the bug bash.
This includes:
- the suggestions UI now presents quick fixes first
- scrolling may result in the button being drawn in the wrong place
- The bug was tracked down this line:
`TermControl::CursorPositionInDips()` --> `_core.CursorPosition()` -->
`Terminal::GetViewportRelativeCursorPosition()`. The mutable viewport
there does _not_ update when the user scrolls. Thus, the button would be
drawn on the same position _on the screen_ even though we scrolled. To
fix this, I include the `_scrollOffset` in the calculation. The only
other place this function is used is with the suggestions UI, which does
_not_ update the UIs position as we scroll (but if we're interested in
doing that, we can now).
Closes#17377
Without a renderer in #17510 we cannot skip "frames" anymore.
As such, using overlapped IO becomes crucial to avoid a regression
in performance. ITerminalHandoff3 fixes this by allowing the terminal
to pick the pipes it wants, which mirrors CreatePseudoConsole
where the caller can also pick its own pipes.
## Validation Steps Performed
* Do a handoff with the dev build
* Input/Output works ✅
This implements a 3s timeout for cursor inheritance which prevents
ConPTY from being deadlocked at startup, if the terminal misbehaves.
It serves another purpose, however, in that it prepares the code for
the introduction of overlapped IO in #17510.
Closes#11213
After the ConPTY rewrite in #17510 we'll not modify any VT sequences
anymore. This means that the `--vtmode` flag uses its only function.
Its only known user is `telnet.exe` which needs to be updated
to sanitize the output on its own. See MSFT:52532514
Split off from #17510:
* `HandleWantsOverlappedIo` can be used to check if a handle requires
overlapped IO. This is important, as `ReadFile` and `WriteFile` are
documented to not work correctly if an overlapped handle is used
without overlapped IO and vice versa.
In my tests with pipes, this appears to be true.
* `CreatePipe` creates a synchronous, unidirectional pipe.
* `CreateOverlappedPipe` does what it says on the tin, while allowing
you to specify the direction of the pipe (in, out, duplex).
* `GetOverlappedResultSameThread` is largely the same as
`GetOverlappedResult`, but adds back a neat optimization from
the time before Windows 7. I thought it was neat.
This abstraction will help #17510 inject its ConPTY-specific behavior
into all 6 relevant console API functions simultaneously. This avoids
having to repeat the same prologue and epilogue 4 times.
Ideally, we'd use composition here, but I found it to be a bad fit.
You can copy the version number from the About dialog. Open the About dialog by opening the menu with the "V" button (to the right of the "+" button that opens a new tab) and choosing About from the end of the list.
validations:
@@ -21,7 +22,7 @@ body:
- type:input
attributes:
label:Windows build number
placeholder:"10.0.19042.0"
placeholder:"10.0.22621.0"
description:|
Please run `ver` or `[Environment]::OSVersion`.
validations:
@@ -32,9 +33,9 @@ body:
label:Other Software
description:If you're reporting a bug about our interaction with other software, what software? What versions?
placeholder:|
vim 8.2 (inside WSL)
OpenSSH_for_Windows_8.1p1
My Cool Application v0.3 (include a code snippet if it would help!)
vim 9.1 (inside WSL)
OpenSSH_for_Windows_9.5p1
My Cool Application v0.4 (include a code snippet if it would help!)
about: Suggest a new feature or improvement (this does not mean you have to implement
it)
title: ''
labels: Issue-Feature
assignees: ''
---
<!--
🚨🚨🚨🚨🚨🚨🚨🚨🚨🚨
I ACKNOWLEDGE THE FOLLOWING BEFORE PROCEEDING:
1. If I delete this entire template and go my own path, the core team may close my issue without further explanation or engagement.
2. If I list multiple bugs/concerns in this one issue, the core team may close my issue without further explanation or engagement.
3. If I write an issue that has many duplicates, the core team may close my issue without further explanation or engagement (and without necessarily spending time to find the exact duplicate ID number).
4. If I leave the title incomplete when filing the issue, the core team may close my issue without further explanation or engagement.
5. If I file something completely blank in the body, the core team may close my issue without further explanation or engagement.
All good? Then proceed!
-->
# Description of the new feature/enhancement
<!--
A clear and concise description of what the problem is that the new feature would solve.
Describe why and how a user would use this new functionality (if applicable).
# Update Lorem based on your content (requires `ge` and `w` from https://github.com/jsoref/spelling; and `review` from https://github.com/check-spelling/check-spelling/wiki/Looking-for-items-locally )
# Even repositories expecting pure English content can unintentionally have Non-English content... People will occasionally mistakenly enter [homoglyphs](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Homoglyph) which are essentially typos, and using this pattern will mean check-spelling will not complain about them.
#
# If the content to be checked should be written in English and the only Non-English items will be people's names, then you can consider adding this.
#
# Alternatively, if you're using check-spelling v0.0.25+, and you would like to _check_ the Non-English content for spelling errors, you can. For information on how to do so, see:
# See https://www.grammarly.com/blog/cannot-or-can-not/
# > Don't use `can not` when you mean `cannot`. The only time you're likely to see `can not` written as separate words is when the word `can` happens to precede some other phrase that happens to start with `not`.
# > `Can't` is a contraction of `cannot`, and it's best suited for informal writing.
# > In formal writing and where contractions are frowned upon, use `cannot`.
# > It is possible to write `can not`, but you generally find it only as part of some other construction, such as `not only . . . but also.`
# - if you encounter such a case, add a pattern for that case to patterns.txt.
@@ -158,7 +158,7 @@ Once you've discussed your proposed feature/fix/etc. with a team member, and you
### Testing
Testing is a key component in the development workflow. Both Windows Terminal and Windows Console use TAEF(the Test Authoring and Execution Framework) as the main framework for testing.
Testing is a key component in the development workflow. Both Windows Terminal and Windows Console use TAEF(the Test Authoring and Execution Framework) as the main framework for testing.
If your changes affect existing test cases, or you're working on brand new features and also the accompanying test cases, see [TAEF](./doc/TAEF.md) for more information about how to validate your work locally.
Please take a few minutes to review the overview below before diving into the
@@ -311,6 +340,19 @@ If you would like to ask a question that you feel doesn't warrant an issue
## Prerequisites
You can configure your environment to build Terminal in one of two ways:
### Using WinGet configuration file
After cloning the repository, you can use a [WinGet configuration file](https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/package-manager/configuration/#use-a-winget-configuration-file-to-configure-your-machine)
to set up your environment. The [default configuration file](.config/configuration.winget) installs Visual Studio 2022 Community & rest of the required tools. There are two other variants of the configuration file available in the [.config](.config) directory for Enterprise & Professional editions of Visual Studio 2022. To run the default configuration file, you can either double-click the file from explorer or run the following command:
```powershell
wingetconfigure.config\configuration.winget
```
### Manual configuration
* You must be running Windows 10 2004 (build >= 10.0.19041.0) or later to run
Windows Terminal
* You must [enable Developer Mode in the Windows Settings
@@ -333,15 +375,6 @@ If you would like to ask a question that you feel doesn't warrant an issue
## Building the Code
This repository uses [git
submodules](https://git-scm.com/book/en/v2/Git-Tools-Submodules) for some of its
dependencies. To make sure submodules are restored or updated, be sure to run
the following prior to building:
```shell
git submodule update --init --recursive
```
OpenConsole.sln may be built from within Visual Studio or from the command-line
using a set of convenience scripts & tools in the **/tools** directory:
@@ -56,7 +56,11 @@ Dies ist ein Open Source-Projekt, und wir freuen uns über die Teilnahme der Com
<ReleaseNotes>
Version __VERSION_NUMBER__
Weitere Einzelheiten finden Sie auf der Seite der GitHub-Veröffentlichungen.
- Wir haben der Benutzeroberfläche durchschnittliche Einstellungen hinzugefügt, die nur einmal in der JSON-Datei vorhanden waren, einschließlich einer neuen Seite zum Anpassen des Layouts Ihres Menüs "Neue Registerkarte"!
- Wir haben die Fensterverwaltung zurückgesetzt, um die Zuverlässigkeit zu verbessern; Melden Sie alle Fehler, die mit dem alias "wt.exe" auftreten.
- Profile zeigen jetzt ein Symbol an, wenn sie ausgeblendet wurden oder auf programme verweisen, die deinstalliert wurden.
Weitere Details finden Sie auf unserer GitHub-Releasesseite.
</ReleaseNotes>
<ScreenshotCaptions>
<!-- Valid length: 200 character limit, up to 9 elements per platform -->
- We've added dozens of settings to the UI that once only existed in the JSON file, including a new page for customizing the layout of your New Tab menu!
- We have rearchitected window management to improve reliability; please file any bugs you encounter with the wt.exe alias
- Profiles now show an icon if they've been hidden or refer to programs which were uninstalled.
Please see our GitHub releases page for additional details.
@@ -56,7 +56,11 @@ Este es un proyecto de fuente abierta y animamos a la comunidad a participar. Pa
<ReleaseNotes>
Versión __VERSION_NUMBER__
Para más información, consulte nuestra página de versiones de GitHub.
- Hemos agregado decenas de configuraciones a la interfaz de usuario que solo existían una vez en el archivo JSON, incluida una página nueva para personalizar el diseño del menú Nueva pestaña.
- Tenemos administración de ventanas rearchitecdas para mejorar la confiabilidad; envíe los errores que encuentre con el alias de wt.exe.
- Ahora, los perfiles muestran un icono si se han ocultado o hacen referencia a programas que se han desinstalado.
Consulte nuestra página de versiones de GitHub para obtener más detalles.
</ReleaseNotes>
<ScreenshotCaptions>
<!-- Valid length: 200 character limit, up to 9 elements per platform -->
@@ -54,9 +54,13 @@ Il s’agit d’un projet open source et nous vous invitons à participer dans l
</DevStudio>
<ReleaseNotes>
Version __VERSION_NUMBER__
__VERSION_NUMBER__ de version
Consultez la page des versions de GitHub pour plus d’informations.
- Nous avons ajouté des milliers de paramètres à l’interface utilisateur qui n’existaient auparavant que dans le fichier JSON, y compris une nouvelle page pour personnaliser la disposition de votre menu Nouvel onglet !
- Nous avons réarchitialiser la gestion des fenêtres pour améliorer la fiabilité ; entrez les bogues rencontrés avec l’alias wt.exe
- Les profils affichent désormais une icône s’ils ont été masqués ou s’ils font référence à des programmes qui ont été désinstallés.
Pour plus d’informations, consultez notre page des mises en production GitHub.
</ReleaseNotes>
<ScreenshotCaptions>
<!-- Valid length: 200 character limit, up to 9 elements per platform -->
@@ -56,7 +56,11 @@ Si tratta di un progetto open source e la partecipazione della community è molt
<ReleaseNotes>
Versione __VERSION_NUMBER__
Per ulteriori dettagli, consulta la nostra pagina delle versioni di GitHub.
- Sono state aggiunte decine di impostazioni all'interfaccia utente che una volta esisteva solo nel file JSON, inclusa una nuova pagina per personalizzare il layout del menu Nuova scheda.
- È stata riattivata la gestione delle finestre per migliorare l'affidabilità; inserire eventuali bug riscontrati con l'alias wt.exe
- I profili ora mostrano un'icona se sono stati nascosti o fanno riferimento ai programmi che sono stati disinstallati.
Per altri dettagli, vedere la pagina delle versioni di GitHub.
</ReleaseNotes>
<ScreenshotCaptions>
<!-- Valid length: 200 character limit, up to 9 elements per platform -->
@@ -56,7 +56,11 @@ Este é um projeto de código aberto e a participação da comunidade é bem-vin
<ReleaseNotes>
Versão __VERSION_NUMBER__
Consulte nossa página de lançamentos do GitHub para obter detalhes adicionais.
- Adicionamos várias configurações à interface do usuário que só existiam no arquivo JSON, incluindo uma nova página para personalizar o layout do menu Nova Guia!
- Temos o gerenciamento de janelas rearmado para melhorar a confiabilidade; registre todos os bugs encontrados com o wt.exe alias
- Os perfis agora mostram um ícone se eles foram ocultos ou se referem a programas que foram desinstalados.
Consulte nossa página de versões do GitHub para obter detalhes adicionais.
</ReleaseNotes>
<ScreenshotCaptions>
<!-- Valid length: 200 character limit, up to 9 elements per platform -->
Дополнительные сведения см. на странице «Выпуски GitHub».
- Мы добавили в пользовательский интерфейс десятки параметров, которые существовали только в JSON-файле, включая новую страницу для настройки макета меню "Новая вкладка".
- Для повышения надежности мы переупоряхлили управление окнами; создайте все ошибки, обнаруженные с wt.exe псевдонимом
- Профили теперь показывают значок, если они скрыты или ссылаются на программы, которые были удалены.
Дополнительные сведения см. на странице выпусков GitHub.
</ReleaseNotes>
<ScreenshotCaptions>
<!-- Valid length: 200 character limit, up to 9 elements per platform -->
@@ -56,7 +56,14 @@ Dies ist ein Open Source-Projekt, und wir freuen uns über die Teilnahme an der
<ReleaseNotes>
Version __VERSION_NUMBER__
Weitere Einzelheiten finden Sie auf der Seite der GitHub-Veröffentlichungen.
– Wir haben umgeschrieben, wie Konsolenanwendungen im Terminal gehostet werden! Melden Sie alle auftretenden Fehler.
– Terminal unterstützt jetzt Sixels!
– Sie können jetzt einen angedockten Bereich öffnen, der Ausschnitte von Befehlen enthält, die Sie gespeichert haben, um sie später zu verwenden.
– Für Benutzer der Eingabeaufforderung der neuesten Version von Windows 11 wird möglicherweise ein QuickInfo-Symbol angezeigt, das installierbare Software von WinGet vorschlägt.
– Ausgewählter Text wird jetzt viel sichtbarer (und anpassbarer!).
- Eine Reihe von Zuverlässigkeitsfehlern, Benutzerfreundlichkeitsproblemen und Ärgernissen wurden behoben.
Weitere Informationen finden Sie auf unserer GitHub-Releaseseite.
</ReleaseNotes>
<ScreenshotCaptions>
<!-- Valid length: 200 character limit, up to 9 elements per platform -->
@@ -56,7 +56,14 @@ Este es un proyecto de fuente abierta y animamos a la comunidad a participar. Pa
<ReleaseNotes>
Versión __VERSION_NUMBER__
Para más información, consulte nuestra página de versiones de GitHub.
- Hemos reescrito cómo se hospedan las aplicaciones de consola en Terminal. Informe de los errores que encuentre.
- Terminal ahora admite síxeles.
- Ahora puede abrir un panel acoplado que contenga fragmentos de comandos que haya guardado para usarlos más adelante
- Los usuarios del símbolo del sistema de la versión más reciente de Windows11 pueden ver un icono de "sugerencia rápida" que sugiere software instalable de WinGet
- El texto seleccionado ahora será mucho más visible (y personalizable)
- Se han corregido varios errores de fiabilidad, problemas de comodidad y molestias.
Consulte la página de versiones de GitHub para más información.
</ReleaseNotes>
<ScreenshotCaptions>
<!-- Valid length: 200 character limit, up to 9 elements per platform -->
@@ -56,7 +56,14 @@ Il s’agit d’un projet open source et nous encourageons la participation à l
<ReleaseNotes>
Version __VERSION_NUMBER__
Consultez la page des versions de GitHub pour plus d’informations.
– Nous avons réécrit la manière dont les applications de console sont hébergées dans Terminal! Veuillez signaler tout bogue que vous rencontrez.
– Terminal prend désormais en charge Sixels!
– Vous pouvez maintenant ouvrir un panneau ancré contenant des extraits de commandes que vous avez enregistrées pour les utiliser ultérieurement
– Les utilisateurs de l’invite de commande sur la dernière version de Windows11 peuvent voir une icône «astuce rapide» qui suggère un logiciel installable à partir de WinGet
– Le texte sélectionné sera désormais beaucoup plus visible (et personnalisable!)
– Un certain nombre de bogues de fiabilité, de problèmes de commodité et de désagréments ont été corrigés.
Veuillez consulter notre page des versions GitHub pour découvrir d’autres détails.
</ReleaseNotes>
<ScreenshotCaptions>
<!-- Valid length: 200 character limit, up to 9 elements per platform -->
@@ -56,7 +56,14 @@ Si tratta di un progetto open source e la partecipazione della community è molt
<ReleaseNotes>
Versione __VERSION_NUMBER__
Per ulteriori dettagli, consulta la nostra pagina delle versioni di GitHub.
- Abbiamo cambiato il modo in cui le applicazioni della console vengono ospitate all’interno di Terminale. Segnala eventuali bug riscontrati.
- Ora Terminale supporta i Sixel.
- Puoi aprire un pannello ancorato contenente frammenti di comandi salvati per usarli in seguito
- Gli utenti che usano il prompt dei comandi nella versione più recente di Windows 11 potrebbero visualizzare un’icona di “suggerimento rapido” che consiglia il software installabile da WinGet
- Il testo selezionato sarà ora molto più visibile, oltre che personalizzabile.
- Sono stati risolti diversi bug di affidabilità e problemi di ordine pratico.
Per altri dettagli, vedi la pagina delle release di GitHub.
</ReleaseNotes>
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@@ -56,7 +56,14 @@ Este é um projeto de código aberto e a participação da comunidade é bem-vin
<ReleaseNotes>
Versão __VERSION_NUMBER__
Consulte nossa página de lançamentos do GitHub para obter detalhes adicionais.
– Reescrevemosa forma como os aplicativos de console são hospedados no Terminal! Relate os bugs encontrados.
– O terminal agora oferece suporte ao Sixels!
– Agora você pode abrir um painel acoplado contendo snippets de comandos que você salvou para usar mais tarde
– Os usuários do Prompt de Comando na versão mais recente do Windows 11 podem ver um ícone de "dica rápida", que sugere softwares instaláveis a partir do WinGet
– O texto selecionado agora ficará muito mais visível (e personalizável!)
– Vários bugs de confiabilidade, problemas de conveniência e incômodos foram resolvidos.
Confira nossa página de lançamentos no GitHub para obter mais detalhes.
</ReleaseNotes>
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Дополнительные сведения см. на странице «Выпуски GitHub».
– Мы переписали, как консольные приложения размещаются внутри Терминала! Сообщайте о любых ошибках, с которыми вы столкнулись.
– Терминал теперь поддерживает форматы Sixel!
– Теперь вы можете открыть закрепленную панель, содержащую фрагменты команд, которые вы сохранили для использования в дальнейшем
– Пользователи командной строки в новейшем выпуске Windows 11 могут увидеть значок "краткой подсказки", который предлагает устанавливаемые программы из WinGet
– Выделенный текст теперь станет более видимым (и настраиваемым!)
– Исправлено несколько ошибок надежности, проблем с удобством, а также устранены раздражающие моменты.
Дополнительные сведения см. на странице выпусков GitHub.
</ReleaseNotes>
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<!-- Copyright (c) Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved. Licensed under the MIT License. See LICENSE in the project root for license information. -->
@@ -34,7 +34,7 @@ We'll be using tags, primarily, to help us understand what needs attention, what
## Rules
### Triage Shorthand
- All rules in this category apply to triaging issues. They're shorthand comments that the triage team can use in order to complete the triage process faster.
- All rules in this category apply to triaging issues. They're shorthand comments that the triage team can use in order to complete the triage process faster.
- Only individuals with `Write` or `Admin` privileges on the repository can use these responses.
#### Duplicate Issues
@@ -109,7 +109,7 @@ We'll be using tags, primarily, to help us understand what needs attention, what
- Will use Squash merge strategy
- Will attempt to delete branch after merge, if possible
- Will automatically remove the `AutoMerge` label if changes are pushed by someone *without* Write Access.
-More information on bot-logic that can be controlled with comments is [here](https://github.com/OfficeDev/office-ui-fabric-react/wiki/Advanced-auto-merge)
-See more [information on bot-logic that can be controlled with comments](https://github.com/OfficeDev/office-ui-fabric-react/wiki/Advanced-auto-merge)
#### Mark issues with an active PR
- If there is an active PR for an issue, label that issue with the `In-PR` label
@@ -119,12 +119,3 @@ We'll be using tags, primarily, to help us understand what needs attention, what
#### Remove Needs-Second from completed PRs
- If a PR is closed and it has the `Needs-Second` tag, the bot will remove the tag.
### Release Management
When a release is created, if the PR ID number is linked inside the release description, the bot will walk through the related PR and all of its related issues and leave a message.
- PR message: "🎉{release name} {release version} has been released which incorporates this pull request.🎉
- Issue message: 🎉This issue was addressed in #{pull request ID}, which has now been successfully released as {release name} {release version}.🎉"
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