This change adds a different label to the property sheet which will be
displayed when conhostv1 is missing. It explains why the legacy console
checkbox is not enabled.
Related work items: MSFT-46195288
Retrieved from https://microsoft.visualstudio.com os.2020 OS official/rs_we_adept_e4d2 41871b6f4c0bba64852bfbaa9255f7677246d6fe
In the Settings UI's Color Scheme page (where you edit the color scheme itself), update the color chip buttons to include the RGB value in the tooltip and screen reader announcements.
Closes#15985Closes#15983
## Validation Steps Performed
Tooltip and screen reader announcement is updated on launch and when a new value is selected.
This PR enables alternate scroll mode by default, and also fixes the
precedence so if there is any other mouse tracking mode enabled, that
will take priority.
## Validation Steps Performed
I've manually tested by viewing a file with `less`, and confirmed that
it can now scroll using the mouse wheel by default. Also tested mouse
mouse in vim and confirmed that still works.
## PR Checklist
Closes#13187
This pull request started out very differently. I was going to move all
the EDP code from the internal `conint` project into the public, because
EDP is [fully documented]!
Well, it doesn't have any headers in the SDK.
Or import libraries.
And it's got a deprecation notice:
> [!NOTE]
> Starting in July 2022, Microsoft is deprecating Windows Information
> Protection (WIP) and the APIs that support WIP. Microsoft will
continue
> to support WIP on supported versions of Windows. New versions of
Windows
> won't include new capabilities for WIP, and it won't be supported in
> future versions of Windows.
So I'm blasting it out the airlock instead.
[fully documented]:
https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/win32/devnotes/windows-information-protection-api
The tolerance value for a similar repo was changed from 0.8 to 0.75.
This is because I changed the backend service for this to use pinecone
instead of Azure AI search (see here
f72fa59e23
) and the metric changed as a result of that. They are slightly lower
than they were before, so this should offset that.
While #16444 left wavy lines in an amazing state already, there were
a few more things that could be done to make GDI look more consistent
with other well known Windows applications.
But before that, a couple unrelated, but helpful changes were made:
* `GdiEngine::UpdateFont` was heavily modified to do all calculations
in floats. All modern CPUs have fast FPUs and even the fairly slow
`lroundf` function is so fast (relatively) nowadays that in a cold
path like this, we can liberally call it to convert back to `int`s.
This makes intermediate calculation more accurate and consistent.
* `GdiEngine::PaintBufferGridLines` was exception-unsafe due to its
use of a `std::vector` with catch clause and this PR fixes that.
Additionally, the vector was swapped out with a `til::small_vector`
to reduce heap allocations. (Arena allocators!)
* RenderingTests was updated to cover styled underlines
With that in place, these improvements were done:
* Word's double-underline algorithm was ported over from `AtlasEngine`.
It uses a half underline-width (aka `thinLineWidth`) which will now
also be used for wavy lines to make them look a bit more filigrane.
* The Bézier curve for wavy/curly underlines was modified to use
control points at (0.5,0.5) and (0.5,-0.5) respectively. This results
in a maxima at y=0.1414 which is much closer to a sine curve with a
maxima at 1/(2pi) = 0.1592. Previously, the maxima was a lot higher
(roughly 4x) depending on the aspect ratio of the glyphs.
* Wavy underlines don't depend on the aspect ratio of glyphs anymore.
This previously led to several problems depending on the exact font.
The old renderer would draw exactly 3 periods of the wave into
each cell which would also ensure continuity between cells.
Unfortunately, this meant that waves could look inconsistent.
The new approach always uses the aforementioned sine-like waves.
* The wavy underline offset was clamped so that it's never outside of
bounds of a line. This avoids clipping.
* Compile RenderingTests and run it
* Using Consolas, MS Gothic and Cascadia Code while Ctrl+Scrolling
up and down works as expected without clipping ✅
(cherry picked from commit 99193c9a3f)
Service-Card-Id: 91356394
Service-Version: 1.19
Fixes Curlyline being drawn as single underline in some cases
**Detailed Description**
- Curlyline is drawn at all font sizes.
- We might render a curlyline that is clipped in cases where we don't
have enough space to draw a full curlyline. This is to give users a
consistent view of Curlylines. Previously in those cases, it was drawn
as a single underline.
- Removed minimum threshold `minCurlyLinePeakHeight` for Curlyline
drawing.
- GDIRender changes:
- Underline offset now points to the (vertical) mid position of the
underline. Removes redundant `underlineMidY` calculation inside the draw
call.
Closes#16288
(cherry picked from commit f5b45c25c9)
Service-Card-Id: 91349182
Service-Version: 1.19
Add support for underline style and color in the renderer
> [!IMPORTANT]
> The PR adds underline style and color feature to AtlasEngine (WT) and
GDIRenderer (Conhost) only.
After the underline style and color feature addition to Conpty, this PR
takes it further and add support for rendering them to the screen!
Out of five underline styles, we already supported rendering for 3 of
those types (Singly, Doubly, Dotted) in some form in our (Atlas)
renderer. The PR adds the remaining types, namely, Dashed and Curly
underlines support to the renderer.
- All renderer engines now receive both gridline and underline color,
and the latter is used for drawing the underlines. **When no underline
color is set, we use the foreground color.**
- Curly underline is rendered using `sin()` within the pixel shader.
- To draw underlines for DECDWL and DECDHL, we send the line rendition
scale within `QuadInstance`'s texcoord attribute.
- In GDI renderer, dashed and dotted underline is drawn using `HPEN`
with a desired style. Curly line is a cubic Bezier that draws one wave
per cell.
## PR Checklist
- ✅ Set the underline color to underlines only, without affecting the
gridline color.
- ❌ Port to DX renderer. (Not planned as DX renderer soon to be replaced
by **AtlasEngine**)
- ✅ Port underline coloring and style to GDI renderer (Conhost).
- ✅ Wide/Tall `CurlyUnderline` variant for `DECDWL`/`DECDHL`.
Closes#7228
(cherry picked from commit e268c1c952)
Service-Card-Id: 91349180
Service-Version: 1.19
Even with the previous fixes we still randomly encounter win32-
input-mode sequences that are broken up in exactly such a way that
e.g. lone escape keys are encounters. Those for instance clear the
current prompt. The remaining parts of the sequence are then visible.
This changeset fixes the issue by skipping the entire force-to-ground
code whenever we saw at least 1 win32-input-mode sequence.
Related to #16343
## Validation Steps Performed
* Host a ConPTY inside ConPTY (= double the trouble) with cmd.exe
* Paste random amounts of text
* In the old code spurious `[..._` strings are seen
* In the new code they're consistently gone ✅
(cherry picked from commit bc18348967)
Service-Card-Id: 91337332
Service-Version: 1.19
Added wrapping to highlighted selection when selecting a word, added
tests for it
## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments
- Modified GetWordStart and GetWordEnd and their helpers to no longer be
bounded by the right and left viewport ranges
- Kept same functionality (does not wrap) when selecting wrapped
whitespace
- Added tests to TextBufferTests.cpp to include cases of wrapping text
## Validation Steps Performed
- Ran locally and verified selection works properly
- Tests passed locally
Closes#4009
Even with the previous fixes we still randomly encounter win32-
input-mode sequences that are broken up in exactly such a way that
e.g. lone escape keys are encounters. Those for instance clear the
current prompt. The remaining parts of the sequence are then visible.
This changeset fixes the issue by skipping the entire force-to-ground
code whenever we saw at least 1 win32-input-mode sequence.
Related to #16343
## Validation Steps Performed
* Host a ConPTY inside ConPTY (= double the trouble) with cmd.exe
* Paste random amounts of text
* In the old code spurious `[..._` strings are seen
* In the new code they're consistently gone ✅
This makes 3 improvements:
* 16x larger input buffer size improves behavior when pasting
clipboard contents while the win32-input-mode is enabled,
as each input character is roughly 15-20x longer after encoding.
* Translate UTF8 to UTF16 outside of the console lock.
* Preserve the UTF16 buffer between reads for less mallocs.
(cherry picked from commit 171a21ad48)
Service-Card-Id: 91347494
Service-Version: 1.19
This is just a minor, unimportant cleanup to remove code duplication
in `_flushBuffer`, which called `SetCursorPosition` twice each time
the cursor position changed.
17cc109 and e9de646 both made the same mistake: When cleaning up our
telemetry code they also removed the calls to `TraceLoggingRegister`
which also broke regular tracing. Windows Defender in particular uses
the "CookedRead" event to monitor for malicious shell commands.
This doesn't fix it the "right way", because destructors of statics
aren't executed when DLLs are unloaded. But I felt like that this is
fine because we have way more statics than that in conhost land,
all of which have the same kind of issue.
While #16444 left wavy lines in an amazing state already, there were
a few more things that could be done to make GDI look more consistent
with other well known Windows applications.
But before that, a couple unrelated, but helpful changes were made:
* `GdiEngine::UpdateFont` was heavily modified to do all calculations
in floats. All modern CPUs have fast FPUs and even the fairly slow
`lroundf` function is so fast (relatively) nowadays that in a cold
path like this, we can liberally call it to convert back to `int`s.
This makes intermediate calculation more accurate and consistent.
* `GdiEngine::PaintBufferGridLines` was exception-unsafe due to its
use of a `std::vector` with catch clause and this PR fixes that.
Additionally, the vector was swapped out with a `til::small_vector`
to reduce heap allocations. (Arena allocators!)
* RenderingTests was updated to cover styled underlines
With that in place, these improvements were done:
* Word's double-underline algorithm was ported over from `AtlasEngine`.
It uses a half underline-width (aka `thinLineWidth`) which will now
also be used for wavy lines to make them look a bit more filigrane.
* The Bézier curve for wavy/curly underlines was modified to use
control points at (0.5,0.5) and (0.5,-0.5) respectively. This results
in a maxima at y=0.1414 which is much closer to a sine curve with a
maxima at 1/(2pi) = 0.1592. Previously, the maxima was a lot higher
(roughly 4x) depending on the aspect ratio of the glyphs.
* Wavy underlines don't depend on the aspect ratio of glyphs anymore.
This previously led to several problems depending on the exact font.
The old renderer would draw exactly 3 periods of the wave into
each cell which would also ensure continuity between cells.
Unfortunately, this meant that waves could look inconsistent.
The new approach always uses the aforementioned sine-like waves.
* The wavy underline offset was clamped so that it's never outside of
bounds of a line. This avoids clipping.
## Validation Steps Performed
* Compile RenderingTests and run it
* Using Consolas, MS Gothic and Cascadia Code while Ctrl+Scrolling
up and down works as expected without clipping ✅
**FIRST TIME CONTRIBUTOR**
Follows the existing selection code as much as possible.
Updated logic that finds selection rectangles to also identify search
rectangles.
Right now, this feature only works in the new Atlas engine -- it uses
the background and foreground color bitmaps to quickly and efficiently
set the colors of a whole region of text.
Closes#7561
Co-authored-by: Leonard Hecker <lhecker@microsoft.com>
This makes 3 improvements:
* 16x larger input buffer size improves behavior when pasting
clipboard contents while the win32-input-mode is enabled,
as each input character is roughly 15-20x longer after encoding.
* Translate UTF8 to UTF16 outside of the console lock.
* Preserve the UTF16 buffer between reads for less mallocs.
The `GenRTF(...)` was using `\highlight` control word for sending
background text color in the RTF format during a copy command. This
doesn't work correctly, since many applications (E.g. MSWord) don't
support full RGB with `\highlight`, and instead uses an approximation of
what is received. For example, `rgb(197, 15, 31)` becomes `rgb(255, 0,
255)`. Also, the standard way of using background colors is `\cbN`
control word, which isn't supported as per the [RTF Spec 1.9.1]
in Word.
But it briefly mentioned a workaround at Pg. 23, which seems to work on
all the RTF editors I tested.
The PR makes the changes to use `\chshdng0\chcbpatN` for the background
coloring.
Also did some refactoring to make the implementation concise.
## Validation Steps Performed
Verified that the background is correctly copied on below editors:
- MSWord
- WordPad
- LibreOffice
- Outlook
[RTF Spec 1.9.1]: https://msopenspecs.azureedge.net/files/Archive_References/[MSFT-RTF].pdf
(cherry picked from commit 310814bb30)
Service-Card-Id: 91349195
Service-Version: 1.19
Fixes Curlyline being drawn as single underline in some cases
**Detailed Description**
- Curlyline is drawn at all font sizes.
- We might render a curlyline that is clipped in cases where we don't
have enough space to draw a full curlyline. This is to give users a
consistent view of Curlylines. Previously in those cases, it was drawn
as a single underline.
- Removed minimum threshold `minCurlyLinePeakHeight` for Curlyline
drawing.
- GDIRender changes:
- Underline offset now points to the (vertical) mid position of the
underline. Removes redundant `underlineMidY` calculation inside the draw
call.
Closes#16288
This prevents an issue in conhost where older versions of Windows
Terminal (including the ones currently inbox in Windows, as well as
stable and preview) will *still* cause WSL interop to hang on startup.
Since VT input is erroneously re-encoded as Win32 input events on those
versions, we need to make sure we request the cursor position *before*
enabling Win32 input mode. That way, the CPR we get back is properly
encoded.
(cherry picked from commit 17867af534)
Service-Card-Id: 91301135
Service-Version: 1.19
This prevents an issue in conhost where older versions of Windows
Terminal (including the ones currently inbox in Windows, as well as
stable and preview) will *still* cause WSL interop to hang on startup.
Since VT input is erroneously re-encoded as Win32 input events on those
versions, we need to make sure we request the cursor position *before*
enabling Win32 input mode. That way, the CPR we get back is properly
encoded.
Changes any references of `> **Note**\` with `> [!NOTE]` to match the
new syntax for markdown files in GitHub.
Fixes the 14 November 2023 update to the alerts syntax in markdown
files:
> ## Update - 14 November 2023
> * The initial syntax using e.g. **Note** isn't supported any longer.
>
> https://github.com/orgs/community/discussions/16925
This changeset fixes an issue caused by #15991 where "chunked" escape
sequences would get corrupted. The fix is to simply not flush eagerly
anymore. I tried my best to keep the input lag reduction from #15991,
but unfortunately this isn't possible for console APIs.
Closes#16079
## Validation Steps Performed
* `type ascii.com` produces soft font ASCII characters ✅
(cherry picked from commit bdf2f6f274)
Service-Card-Id: 91283205
Service-Version: 1.19
This is my proposal to avoid aborting ConPTY input parsing because a
read accidentally got split up into more than one chunk. This happens a
lot with WSL for me, as I often get (for instance) a
`\x1b[67;46;99;0;32;` input followed immediately by a `1_` input. The
current logic would cause both of these to be flushed out to the client
application.
This PR fixes the issue by only flushing either a standalone escape
character or a escape+character combination. It basically limits the
previous code to just `VTStates::Ground` and `VTStates::Escape`.
I'm not using the `_state` member, because `VTStates::OscParam` makes no
distinction between `\x1b]` and `\x1b]1234` and I only want to flush the
former. I felt like checking the contents of `run` directly is easier to
understand.
Related to #16343
## Validation Steps Performed
* win32-input-mode sequences are now properly buffered ✅
* Standalone alt-key combinations are still being flushed ✅
(cherry picked from commit 5f5ef10571)
Service-Card-Id: 91270261
Service-Version: 1.19
Upgrades check-spelling to [v0.0.22](https://github.com/check-spelling/check-spelling/releases/tag/v0.0.22)
* refreshes workflow
* enables dependabot PRs to trigger CI (so that in the future you'll be
able to see breaking changes to the dictionary paths)
* refreshes metadata
* built-in handling of `\n`/`\r`/`\t` is removed -- This means that the
`patterns/0_*.txt` files can be removed.
* this specific PR includes some shim content, in
`allow/check-spelling-0.0.21.txt` -- once it this PR merges, it can be
removed on a branch and the next CI will clean out items from
`expect.txt` relating to the `\r` stuff and suggest replacement content.
* talking to the bot is enabled for forks (but not the master
repository)
* SARIF reporting is enabled for PRs w/in a single repository (not
across forks)
* In job reports, there's a summary table (space permitting) linking to
instances (this is a poor man's SARIF report)
* When a pattern splits a thing that results in check-spelling finding
an unrecognized token, that's reported with a distinct category
* When there are items in expect that not longer match anything but more
specific items do (e.g. `microsoft` vs. `Microsoft`), there's now a
specific category with help/advice
* Fancier excludes suggestions (excluding directories, file types, ...)
* Refreshed dictionaries
* The comment now links to the job summary (which includes SARIF link if
available, the details view, and a generated commit that people can use
if they're ok w/ the expect changes and don't want to run perl)
Validation
----------
1. the branch was developed in
https://github.com/check-spelling-sandbox/terminal/actions?query=branch%3Acheck-spelling-0.0.22
2. ensuring compatibility with 0.0.21 was done in
https://github.com/check-spelling-sandbox/terminal/pull/3
3. this version has been in development for a year and has quite a few
improvements, we've been actively dogfooding it throughout this period 😄
Additional Fixes
----------------
spelling: the
spelling: shouldn't
spelling: no
spelling: macos
spelling: github
spelling: fine-grained
spelling: coarse-grained
Signed-off-by: Josh Soref <2119212+jsoref@users.noreply.github.com>
## Summary of the Pull Request
Added some Punctuation Marks as Required.
## References and Relevant Issues
None.
## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments
There were some missing Punctuation Marks(Ex: Colon(:) and Full
Stop(.)), so I have added them.
## Validation Steps Performed
This is my proposal to avoid aborting ConPTY input parsing because a
read accidentally got split up into more than one chunk. This happens a
lot with WSL for me, as I often get (for instance) a
`\x1b[67;46;99;0;32;` input followed immediately by a `1_` input. The
current logic would cause both of these to be flushed out to the client
application.
This PR fixes the issue by only flushing either a standalone escape
character or a escape+character combination. It basically limits the
previous code to just `VTStates::Ground` and `VTStates::Escape`.
I'm not using the `_state` member, because `VTStates::OscParam` makes no
distinction between `\x1b]` and `\x1b]1234` and I only want to flush the
former. I felt like checking the contents of `run` directly is easier to
understand.
Related to #16343
## Validation Steps Performed
* win32-input-mode sequences are now properly buffered ✅
* Standalone alt-key combinations are still being flushed ✅
`EnableScrollbar()` and especially `SetScrollInfo()` are prohibitively
expensive functions nowadays. This improves throughput of good old
`type` in cmd.exe by ~10x, by briefly releasing the console lock.
## Validation Steps Performed
* `type`ing a file in `cmd` is as fast while the window is scrolling
as it is while it isn't scrolling ✅
* Scrollbar pops in and out when scroll-forward is disabled ✅
When ConPTY exits it should attempt to restore the state as it was
before it started. This is particularly important for the win32
input mode sequences, as Linux shells don't know what to do with it.
Related to #16343
## Validation Steps Performed
* Replace conhost with this
* Launch a Win32 application inside WSL
* Exit that application
* Shell prompt doesn't get filled with win32 input mode sequences ✅
(cherry picked from commit 70e51ae28d)
Service-Card-Id: 91246943
Service-Version: 1.19
When ConPTY exits it should attempt to restore the state as it was
before it started. This is particularly important for the win32
input mode sequences, as Linux shells don't know what to do with it.
Related to #16343
## Validation Steps Performed
* Replace conhost with this
* Launch a Win32 application inside WSL
* Exit that application
* Shell prompt doesn't get filled with win32 input mode sequences ✅
The final parameter, `updateBottom`, controls not just whether the
`_virtualBottom` is updated, but also whether the position is clamped
to be within the existing `_virtualBottom`. Setting this to `false`
thus broke scroll-forward as the `_virtualBottom` was now a constant.
## Validation Steps Performed
* Disable scroll-foward
* Press and hold Ctrl+C
* It scrolls past the viewport bottom ✅
(cherry picked from commit ab7a2f10c5)
Service-Card-Id: 91258882
Service-Version: 1.19
This changeset avoids re-encoding output from `AdaptDispatch`
via the win32-input-mode mechanism when VT input is enabled.
That is, an `AdaptDispatch` output like `\x1b[C` would otherwise
result in dozens of characters of input.
Related to #16343
## Validation Steps Performed
* Replace conhost with this
* Launch a Win32 application inside WSL
* ASCII keyboard inputs are represented as single `INPUT_RECORD`s ✅
(cherry picked from commit 0da37a134a)
Service-Card-Id: 91246942
Service-Version: 1.19
tl;dr: A coroutine lambda does not hold onto captured variables.
This causes an AV crash when closing tabs. I randomly noticed this
in a Debug build as the memory contents got replaced with 0xCD.
In a Release build this bug is probably fairly subtle and not common.
(cherry picked from commit 91fd7d0101)
Service-Card-Id: 91258717
Service-Version: 1.19
This enables AtlasEngine by default in the 1.19 release branch.
A future change will remove the alternative DxEngine entirely.
(cherry picked from commit 204ebf3b19)
Service-Card-Id: 91158876
Service-Version: 1.19
The final parameter, `updateBottom`, controls not just whether the
`_virtualBottom` is updated, but also whether the position is clamped
to be within the existing `_virtualBottom`. Setting this to `false`
thus broke scroll-forward as the `_virtualBottom` was now a constant.
## Validation Steps Performed
* Disable scroll-foward
* Press and hold Ctrl+C
* It scrolls past the viewport bottom ✅
This changeset avoids re-encoding output from `AdaptDispatch`
via the win32-input-mode mechanism when VT input is enabled.
That is, an `AdaptDispatch` output like `\x1b[C` would otherwise
result in dozens of characters of input.
Related to #16343
## Validation Steps Performed
* Replace conhost with this
* Launch a Win32 application inside WSL
* ASCII keyboard inputs are represented as single `INPUT_RECORD`s ✅
tl;dr: A coroutine lambda does not hold onto captured variables.
This causes an AV crash when closing tabs. I randomly noticed this
in a Debug build as the memory contents got replaced with 0xCD.
In a Release build this bug is probably fairly subtle and not common.
During `!measureOnly` the old code would increment `distance` twice.
Now it doesn't. :)
Closes#16356
## Validation Steps Performed
See updated test instructions in `doc/COOKED_READ_DATA.md`
(cherry picked from commit 654b755161)
Service-Card-Id: 91232745
Service-Version: 1.19
Since all VT parameters are treated to be at least 1 (and 1 if they're
absent or 0), `modifierParam > 0` was always true. This meant that
`ENHANCED_KEY` was always being set. It's unclear why `ENHANCED_KEY`
was used there, but it's likely not needed in general.
Closes#16266
## Validation Steps Performed
* Can't test this unless we fix the win32 input mode issue #16343❌
(cherry picked from commit be9fc200c7)
Service-Card-Id: 91159301
Service-Version: 1.19
## Summary of the Pull Request
Cloud shell connection calls out to Azure to do a device code login.
When the polling interval is exceeded or the tab is closed, the method
doing the connection polling returns `nullptr`, and `AzureConnection`
immediately tries to `GetNamedString` from it, causing a crash. This
doesn't repro on Terminal Stable or Preview, suggesting it's pretty
recent related to the update of this azureconnection.
This is just a proposed fix, not sure if you want to do more extensive
changes to the affected class or not, so marking this as a draft.
## References and Relevant Issues
* N/A - encountered this while using the terminal myself
## PR Checklist/Validation
Tested out a local dev build:
- [x] Terminal doesn't crash when cloudshell polling interval exceeded
- [x] Terminal doesn't crash when cloudshell tab closed while polling
for Azure login
(cherry picked from commit 0c4751ba30)
Service-Card-Id: 91232784
Service-Version: 1.19
81b7e54 caused a regression in `SetConsoleWindowInfo` and any other
function that used the `WriteToScreen` helper. This is because it
assumes that it can place the viewport anywhere randomly and it was
written at a time where `TriggerScroll` didn't exist yet (there was
no need for that (also not today, but that's being worked on)).
Caching the viewport meant that `WriteToScreen`'s call to
`TriggerRedraw` would pick up the viewport from the last rendered
frame, which would cause the intersection of both to be potentially
empty and nothing to be drawn on the screen.
This commit reverts 81b7e54 as I found that it has no or negligible
impact on performance at this point, likely due to the overall
vastly better performance of conhost nowadays.
Closes#15932
## Validation Steps Performed
* Scroll the viewport by entire pages worth of content using
`SetConsoleWindowInfo` - see #15932
* The screen and scrollbars update immediately ✅
(cherry picked from commit 7a1b6f9d2a)
Service-Card-Id: 91152167
Service-Version: 1.19
Converts null byte to specific input event, so that it's properly
delivered to the program running in the terminal.
Closes#15939
(cherry picked from commit 8747a39a07)
Service-Card-Id: 91201444
Service-Version: 1.19
This fixes an issue where character-wise reading of an input like "abc"
would return "a" to the caller, store "b" as a partial translation
(= wrong) and return "c" for the caller to store it for the next call.
Closes#16223Closes#16299
## Validation Steps Performed
* `ReadFile` with a buffer size of 1 returns inputs character by
character without dropping any inputs ✅
---------
Co-authored-by: Dustin L. Howett <duhowett@microsoft.com>
(cherry picked from commit 63b3820a18)
Service-Card-Id: 91122022
Service-Version: 1.19
Under normal circumstances this bug should be rare as far as I can
observe it on my system. However, it does occur randomly.
In short, WSL doesn't pass us anonymous pipes, but rather WSA sockets
and those signal their graceful shutdown first before being closed
later by returning a `lpNumberOfBytesRead` of 0 in the meantime.
Additionally, `VtIo` synchronously pumps the input pipe to get the
initial cursor position, but fails to check `_exitRequested`.
And so even with the pipe handling fixed, `VtIo` will also deadlock,
because it will never realize that `VtInputThread` is done reading.
## Validation Steps Performed
* Build commit 376737e with this change and replace conhost with it
Coincidentally it contains a bug (of as of yet unknown origin)
due to which the initial cursor position loop in `VtIo` never
completes. Thanks to this, we can easily provoke this issue.
* Launch WSL in conhost and run an .exe inside it
* Close the conhost window
* Task manager shows that all conhost instances exit immediately
(cherry picked from commit adb04729bc)
Service-Card-Id: 91152102
Service-Version: 1.19
The nearby font loading has to be outside of the try/catch of the
`_FindFontFace` call, because it'll throw for broken font files.
But in my previous PR I had overlooked that the font variant loop
modifies the only copy of the face name that we got and was in the
same try/catch. That's bad, because once we get to the nearby search
code, the face name will be invalid. This commit fixes the issue by
wrapping each individual `_FindFontFace` call in a try/catch block.
Closes#16322
## Validation Steps Performed
* Remove every single copy of Windows Terminal from your system
* Manually clean up Cascadia .ttf files because they aren't gone
* Destroy your registry by manually removing appx references (fun!)
* Put the 4 Cascadia .ttf files into the Dev app AppX directory
* Launch
* No warning ✅
(cherry picked from commit b780b44528)
Service-Card-Id: 91114951
Service-Version: 1.19
I find it somewhat silly that (1) this isn't documented anywhere and (2)
installing the "desktop experience" packages for Server doesn't
automatically add support for the `Windows.Desktop` platform...
Oh well.
I'm going to roll this one out via Preview first, because if the store
blows up on it I would rather it not be during Stable roll-out.
(cherry picked from commit 86fb9b4478)
Service-Card-Id: 91098597
Service-Version: 1.19
During `!measureOnly` the old code would increment `distance` twice.
Now it doesn't. :)
Closes#16356
## Validation Steps Performed
See updated test instructions in `doc/COOKED_READ_DATA.md`
Since all VT parameters are treated to be at least 1 (and 1 if they're
absent or 0), `modifierParam > 0` was always true. This meant that
`ENHANCED_KEY` was always being set. It's unclear why `ENHANCED_KEY`
was used there, but it's likely not needed in general.
Closes#16266
## Validation Steps Performed
* Can't test this unless we fix the win32 input mode issue #16343❌
I randomly came across this class, that I didn't even remember we had.
We don't use this class at the moment and won't need it any time soon.
Its current implementation is also fairly questionable. While
`til::u16state` isn't "perfect", it's vastly better than this.
## Summary of the Pull Request
Cloud shell connection calls out to Azure to do a device code login.
When the polling interval is exceeded or the tab is closed, the method
doing the connection polling returns `nullptr`, and `AzureConnection`
immediately tries to `GetNamedString` from it, causing a crash. This
doesn't repro on Terminal Stable or Preview, suggesting it's pretty
recent related to the update of this azureconnection.
This is just a proposed fix, not sure if you want to do more extensive
changes to the affected class or not, so marking this as a draft.
## References and Relevant Issues
* N/A - encountered this while using the terminal myself
## PR Checklist/Validation
Tested out a local dev build:
- [x] Terminal doesn't crash when cloudshell polling interval exceeded
- [x] Terminal doesn't crash when cloudshell tab closed while polling
for Azure login
81b7e54 caused a regression in `SetConsoleWindowInfo` and any other
function that used the `WriteToScreen` helper. This is because it
assumes that it can place the viewport anywhere randomly and it was
written at a time where `TriggerScroll` didn't exist yet (there was
no need for that (also not today, but that's being worked on)).
Caching the viewport meant that `WriteToScreen`'s call to
`TriggerRedraw` would pick up the viewport from the last rendered
frame, which would cause the intersection of both to be potentially
empty and nothing to be drawn on the screen.
This commit reverts 81b7e54 as I found that it has no or negligible
impact on performance at this point, likely due to the overall
vastly better performance of conhost nowadays.
Closes#15932
## Validation Steps Performed
* Scroll the viewport by entire pages worth of content using
`SetConsoleWindowInfo` - see #15932
* The screen and scrollbars update immediately ✅
After exiting the main loop in this function the invariant
`nFont <= NumberOfFonts` still holds true. Additionally,
preceding this removed code is this (paraphrased):
```cpp
if (nFont < NumberOfFonts) {
RtlMoveMemory(...);
}
```
It ensures that the given slot `nFont` is always unoccupied by moving
it and all following items upwards if needed. As such, the call to
`DeleteObject` is always incorrect, as the slot is always "empty",
but may contain a copy of the previous occupant due to the `memmove`.
This regressed in 154ac2b.
Closes#16297
## Validation Steps Performed
* All fonts have a unique look in the preview panel ✅
This PR fixes Issue #11875 by introducing a ScrollViewer and some logic
for the scrollbar.
The ScrollViewer prevents the scrollbar from scrolling to the top
whenever "Save" is clicked in the Settings. In addition, the scrollbar
is scrolled to the top of the page whenever navigating to another page
within Settings. The scrollbar will not reset if attempting to navigate
to the same page that is already navigated to.
## Validation Steps Performed
Manual testing of the Settings by building the Terminal app.
Closes#11875
This fixes an issue where character-wise reading of an input like "abc"
would return "a" to the caller, store "b" as a partial translation
(= wrong) and return "c" for the caller to store it for the next call.
Closes#16223Closes#16299
## Validation Steps Performed
* `ReadFile` with a buffer size of 1 returns inputs character by
character without dropping any inputs ✅
---------
Co-authored-by: Dustin L. Howett <duhowett@microsoft.com>
Adds "Campbell Absolute" which has absolute black/white instead of
slightly greyish variants as discussed per #35. Also updates line
endings to adhere to the default Windows line endings (i.e. CRLF)
Closes#35
This changeset fixes an issue caused by #15991 where "chunked" escape
sequences would get corrupted. The fix is to simply not flush eagerly
anymore. I tried my best to keep the input lag reduction from #15991,
but unfortunately this isn't possible for console APIs.
Closes#16079
## Validation Steps Performed
* `type ascii.com` produces soft font ASCII characters ✅
Under normal circumstances this bug should be rare as far as I can
observe it on my system. However, it does occur randomly.
In short, WSL doesn't pass us anonymous pipes, but rather WSA sockets
and those signal their graceful shutdown first before being closed
later by returning a `lpNumberOfBytesRead` of 0 in the meantime.
Additionally, `VtIo` synchronously pumps the input pipe to get the
initial cursor position, but fails to check `_exitRequested`.
And so even with the pipe handling fixed, `VtIo` will also deadlock,
because it will never realize that `VtInputThread` is done reading.
## Validation Steps Performed
* Build commit 376737e with this change and replace conhost with it
Coincidentally it contains a bug (of as of yet unknown origin)
due to which the initial cursor position loop in `VtIo` never
completes. Thanks to this, we can easily provoke this issue.
* Launch WSL in conhost and run an .exe inside it
* Close the conhost window
* Task manager shows that all conhost instances exit immediately
Just like in https://github.com/microsoft/WSL/pull/10745
We're working with the WSL team to figure out if we can use a LLM to
help us triage. This _should_ just comment on issues, if it finds
something similar on the backlog.
Our CI seems to have had an update recently to around VS 17.7.
That version contains a faulty implementation for C26478 and C26494.
The issue has been fixed in VS 17.8 and later.
The nearby font loading has to be outside of the try/catch of the
`_FindFontFace` call, because it'll throw for broken font files.
But in my previous PR I had overlooked that the font variant loop
modifies the only copy of the face name that we got and was in the
same try/catch. That's bad, because once we get to the nearby search
code, the face name will be invalid. This commit fixes the issue by
wrapping each individual `_FindFontFace` call in a try/catch block.
Closes#16322
## Validation Steps Performed
* Remove every single copy of Windows Terminal from your system
* Manually clean up Cascadia .ttf files because they aren't gone
* Destroy your registry by manually removing appx references (fun!)
* Put the 4 Cascadia .ttf files into the Dev app AppX directory
* Launch
* No warning ✅
I find it somewhat silly that (1) this isn't documented anywhere and (2)
installing the "desktop experience" packages for Server doesn't
automatically add support for the `Windows.Desktop` platform...
Oh well.
I'm going to roll this one out via Preview first, because if the store
blows up on it I would rather it not be during Stable roll-out.
I've also removed all of the supporting code.
Related work items: MSFT-47555635
Retrieved from https://microsoft.visualstudio.com os.2020 OS official/rs_we_adept_e4d2 f8ad0110fd81d1b848224158c8f95724f34b1db2
Notes in #16217 have the investigation.
TL;DR: we'd always buffer text. Even if we're disabled (unfocused). When
we're
disabled, we'd _never_ clear the buffered text. Oops.
Closes#16217
(cherry picked from commit d14524cd4c)
Service-Card-Id: 91033138
Service-Version: 1.19
The Azure cloud shell team made some API changes that required us to
format our requests a little differently. This PR makes those changes
(more info in the comments in the code)
Closes#16098
(cherry picked from commit 5a9f3529d7)
Service-Card-Id: 90985893
Service-Version: 1.19
It makes the output less cluttered and more correct (for example:
ServicingPipeline no longer tries to service two copies of each commit
if there's a merge in the history...)
(cherry picked from commit 18b0ecbb2a)
Service-Card-Id: 91042450
Service-Version: 1.19
This fixes a number of bugs introduced in 4370da9, all of which are of
the same kind: Holding the terminal lock across `WriteFile` calls into
the ConPTY pipe. This is problematic, because the pipe has a tiny buffer
size of just 4KiB and ConPTY may respond on its output pipe, before the
entire buffer given to `WriteFile` has been emptied. When the ConPTY
output thread then tries to acquire the terminal lock to begin parsing
the VT output, we get ourselves a proper deadlock (cross process too!).
The solution is to tease `Terminal` further apart into code that is
thread-safe and code that isn't. Functions like `SendKeyEvent` so far
have mixed them into one, because when they get called by `ControlCore`
they both, processed the data (not thread-safe as it accesses VT state)
and also sent that data back into `ControlCore` through a callback
which then indirectly called into the `ConptyConnection` which calls
`WriteFile`. Instead, we now return the data that needs to be sent from
these functions, and `ControlCore` is free to release the lock and
then call into the connection, which may then block indefinitely.
## Validation Steps Performed
* Start nvim in WSL
* Press `i` to enter the regular Insert mode
* Paste 1MB of text
* Doesn't deadlock ✅
(cherry picked from commit 71a1a97a9a)
Service-Card-Id: 91043521
Service-Version: 1.19
Adds
```xml
<uap17:UpdateWhileInUse>defer</uap17:UpdateWhileInUse>
```
to our `Package.Properties` for all our packages.
This was added in the September 2023 OS release of Windows 11.
Apparently, this just works now? I did update VS,
but I don't _think_ that updated the SDK.
I have no idea how it updated the manifest definitions.
Closes#3915Closes#6726
(cherry picked from commit 077d63e6a3)
Service-Card-Id: 91033136
Service-Version: 1.19
Notes in #16217 have the investigation.
TL;DR: we'd always buffer text. Even if we're disabled (unfocused). When
we're
disabled, we'd _never_ clear the buffered text. Oops.
Closes#16217
Add support for underline style and color in the renderer
> [!IMPORTANT]
> The PR adds underline style and color feature to AtlasEngine (WT) and
GDIRenderer (Conhost) only.
After the underline style and color feature addition to Conpty, this PR
takes it further and add support for rendering them to the screen!
Out of five underline styles, we already supported rendering for 3 of
those types (Singly, Doubly, Dotted) in some form in our (Atlas)
renderer. The PR adds the remaining types, namely, Dashed and Curly
underlines support to the renderer.
- All renderer engines now receive both gridline and underline color,
and the latter is used for drawing the underlines. **When no underline
color is set, we use the foreground color.**
- Curly underline is rendered using `sin()` within the pixel shader.
- To draw underlines for DECDWL and DECDHL, we send the line rendition
scale within `QuadInstance`'s texcoord attribute.
- In GDI renderer, dashed and dotted underline is drawn using `HPEN`
with a desired style. Curly line is a cubic Bezier that draws one wave
per cell.
## PR Checklist
- ✅ Set the underline color to underlines only, without affecting the
gridline color.
- ❌ Port to DX renderer. (Not planned as DX renderer soon to be replaced
by **AtlasEngine**)
- ✅ Port underline coloring and style to GDI renderer (Conhost).
- ✅ Wide/Tall `CurlyUnderline` variant for `DECDWL`/`DECDHL`.
Closes#7228
This changes the appearance of the disclaimer text that is used on some
of the settings pages. The italic text style is replaced with a neutral
style that fits better with the rest of the UI.
## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments
I also tried out these alternative styles but overall preferred the
default TextBlock style (BodyTextBlockStyle).
Closes#16264.
The Azure cloud shell team made some API changes that required us to
format our requests a little differently. This PR makes those changes
(more info in the comments in the code)
Closes#16098
It makes the output less cluttered and more correct (for example:
ServicingPipeline no longer tries to service two copies of each commit
if there's a merge in the history...)
This fixes a number of bugs introduced in 4370da9, all of which are of
the same kind: Holding the terminal lock across `WriteFile` calls into
the ConPTY pipe. This is problematic, because the pipe has a tiny buffer
size of just 4KiB and ConPTY may respond on its output pipe, before the
entire buffer given to `WriteFile` has been emptied. When the ConPTY
output thread then tries to acquire the terminal lock to begin parsing
the VT output, we get ourselves a proper deadlock (cross process too!).
The solution is to tease `Terminal` further apart into code that is
thread-safe and code that isn't. Functions like `SendKeyEvent` so far
have mixed them into one, because when they get called by `ControlCore`
they both, processed the data (not thread-safe as it accesses VT state)
and also sent that data back into `ControlCore` through a callback
which then indirectly called into the `ConptyConnection` which calls
`WriteFile`. Instead, we now return the data that needs to be sent from
these functions, and `ControlCore` is free to release the lock and
then call into the connection, which may then block indefinitely.
## Validation Steps Performed
* Start nvim in WSL
* Press `i` to enter the regular Insert mode
* Paste 1MB of text
* Doesn't deadlock ✅
Adds
```xml
<uap17:UpdateWhileInUse>defer</uap17:UpdateWhileInUse>
```
to our `Package.Properties` for all our packages.
This was added in the September 2023 OS release of Windows 11.
Apparently, this just works now? I did update VS,
but I don't _think_ that updated the SDK.
I have no idea how it updated the manifest definitions.
Closes#3915Closes#6726
- AtlasEngine: Minor bug fixes (GH-16219)
- Fix the fix for the fix of nearby font loading (GH-16196)
- Added selectionBackground to light color schemes (GH-16243)
- Another theoretical fix for a crash (GH-16267)
- Fix tabs being printed in cmd.exe prompts (GH-16273)
Related work items: MSFT-47266988
A late change in #16105 wrapped `_buffer` into a class to better track
its dirty state, but I failed to notice that in this one instance we
intentionally manipulated `_buffer` without marking it as dirty.
This fixes the issue by adding a call to `MarkAsClean()`.
This changeset also adds the test instructions from #15783 as a
document to this repository. I've extended the list with two
bugs we've found in the implementation since then.
## Validation Steps Performed
* In cmd.exe, with an empty prompt in an empty directory:
Pressing tab produces an audible bing and prints no text ✅
(cherry picked from commit 7a8dd90294)
Service-Card-Id: 91033502
Service-Version: 1.19
For history:
> This is MSFT:46763065 internally. Dumps show this repros on 1.19 too.
>
> This was previously #16061 which had a theoretical fix in #16065.
Looks like you're on Terminal Stable v1.18.2822.0, and
https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/releases/tag/v1.18.2822.0 is
supposed to have had that fix in it. Dang.
> well this is embarrassing ... I never actually checked if we _still
had a `_window`_. We're alive, yay! But we're still in the middle of
refrigerating. So, there's no HWND anymore
Attempt to fix this by actually ensuring there's a `_window` in
`AppHost::_WindowInitializedHandler`
Closes#16235
(cherry picked from commit 59dcbbe0e9)
Service-Card-Id: 91041359
Service-Version: 1.19
Add a selectionBackground property which is set to the scheme's
brightBlack too all 3 of the light color schemes.
Related to #8716
It does not close the bug because as mentioned in the issue, when you
input numbers, they seem to be invisible in the light color schemes and
selecting them with the cursor doesn't reveal them.
(cherry picked from commit a5c269b280)
Service-Card-Id: 91033167
Service-Version: 1.19
I still don't know how to reproduce it properly, but I'm slowly
wrapping my head around how and why it happens. The issue isn't that
`FindFamilyName` fails with `exists=FALSE`, but rather that any of the
followup calls like `GetDesignGlyphMetrics` fails, which results in an
exception and subsequently in an orderly fallback to Consolas.
I've always thought that the issue is that even with the nearby font
collection we get an `exists=FALSE`... I'm not sure why I thought that.
This changeset also drops the fallback iteration for Lucida Console and
Courier New, because I felt like the code looks neater that way and I
think it's a reasonable expectation that Consolas is always installed.
Closes#16058
(cherry picked from commit 9e86c9811f)
Service-Card-Id: 90885607
Service-Version: 1.19
This commit fixes 4 minor bugs:
* Forgot to set the maximum swap chain latency. Without it, it defaults
to up to 3 frames of latency. We don't need this, because our renderer
is simple and fast and is expected to draw frames within <1ms.
* ClearType treats the alpha channel as ignored, whereas custom shaders
can manipulate the alpha channel freely. This meant that using both
simultaneously would produce weird effects, like text having black
background. We now force grayscale AA instead.
* The builtin retro shader should not be effected by the previous point.
* When the cbuffer is entirely unused in a custom shader, it has so far
resulted in constant redraws. This happened because the D3D reflection
`GetDesc` call will then return `E_FAIL` in this situation.
The new code on the other hand will now assume that a failure
to get the description is equal to the variable being unused.
Closes#15960
## Validation Steps Performed
* A custom passthrough shader works with grayscale and ClearType AA
while also changing the opacity with Ctrl+Shift+Scroll ✅
* Same for the builtin retro shader, but ClearType works ✅
* The passthrough shader doesn't result in constant redrawing ✅
(cherry picked from commit 0289cb043c)
Service-Card-Id: 90915277
Service-Version: 1.19
A late change in #16105 wrapped `_buffer` into a class to better track
its dirty state, but I failed to notice that in this one instance we
intentionally manipulated `_buffer` without marking it as dirty.
This fixes the issue by adding a call to `MarkAsClean()`.
This changeset also adds the test instructions from #15783 as a
document to this repository. I've extended the list with two
bugs we've found in the implementation since then.
## Validation Steps Performed
* In cmd.exe, with an empty prompt in an empty directory:
Pressing tab produces an audible bing and prints no text ✅
For history:
> This is MSFT:46763065 internally. Dumps show this repros on 1.19 too.
>
> This was previously #16061 which had a theoretical fix in #16065.
Looks like you're on Terminal Stable v1.18.2822.0, and
https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/releases/tag/v1.18.2822.0 is
supposed to have had that fix in it. Dang.
> well this is embarrassing ... I never actually checked if we _still
had a `_window`_. We're alive, yay! But we're still in the middle of
refrigerating. So, there's no HWND anymore
Attempt to fix this by actually ensuring there's a `_window` in
`AppHost::_WindowInitializedHandler`
Closes#16235
Add a selectionBackground property which is set to the scheme's
brightBlack too all 3 of the light color schemes.
Related to #8716
It does not close the bug because as mentioned in the issue, when you
input numbers, they seem to be invisible in the light color schemes and
selecting them with the cursor doesn't reveal them.
The `Telemetry` class was implemented as a singleton which stood in
my long-term goal to remove all global variables from the project.
Most telemetry captured by it hasn't been looked at for a long time
and just as much is now pointless (e.g.,`_fCtrlPgUpPgDnUsed`).
This removes the code.
## Validation Steps Performed
* Still compiles ✅
I still don't know how to reproduce it properly, but I'm slowly
wrapping my head around how and why it happens. The issue isn't that
`FindFamilyName` fails with `exists=FALSE`, but rather that any of the
followup calls like `GetDesignGlyphMetrics` fails, which results in an
exception and subsequently in an orderly fallback to Consolas.
I've always thought that the issue is that even with the nearby font
collection we get an `exists=FALSE`... I'm not sure why I thought that.
This changeset also drops the fallback iteration for Lucida Console and
Courier New, because I felt like the code looks neater that way and I
think it's a reasonable expectation that Consolas is always installed.
Closes#16058
This commit fixes 4 minor bugs:
* Forgot to set the maximum swap chain latency. Without it, it defaults
to up to 3 frames of latency. We don't need this, because our renderer
is simple and fast and is expected to draw frames within <1ms.
* ClearType treats the alpha channel as ignored, whereas custom shaders
can manipulate the alpha channel freely. This meant that using both
simultaneously would produce weird effects, like text having black
background. We now force grayscale AA instead.
* The builtin retro shader should not be effected by the previous point.
* When the cbuffer is entirely unused in a custom shader, it has so far
resulted in constant redraws. This happened because the D3D reflection
`GetDesc` call will then return `E_FAIL` in this situation.
The new code on the other hand will now assume that a failure
to get the description is equal to the variable being unused.
Closes#15960
## Validation Steps Performed
* A custom passthrough shader works with grayscale and ClearType AA
while also changing the opacity with Ctrl+Shift+Scroll ✅
* Same for the builtin retro shader, but ClearType works ✅
* The passthrough shader doesn't result in constant redrawing ✅
Retrieved from https://microsoft.visualstudio.com os.2020 OS official/rs_we_adept_e4d2 3fc4bb99c75451d0ecadd7e4c8fe06ad67217574
Related work items: MSFT-47266988
As in the title. Also fixes a crash for refrigeration with the rainbow
border.
Closes#16211
Tested by manually forcing us into Windows 10 mode (to refrigerate the
window). That immediately repros the bug, which was simple enough to
fix.
(cherry picked from commit d8c7719bfb)
Service-Card-Id: 90928408
Service-Version: 1.19
The initial cooked read (= conhost readline) rewrite had two flaws:
* Using viewport scrolls under ConPTY to avoid emitting newlines
resulted in various bugs around marks, coloring, etc. It's still
somewhat unclear why this happened, but the next issue is related and
much worse.
* Rewriting the input line every time causes problems with accessibility
tools, as they'll re-announce unchanged parts again and again.
The solution to these is to simply stop writing the unchanged parts of
the prompt. To do this, code was added to measure the size of text
without actually inserting them into the buffer. Since this meant that
the "interactive" mode of `WriteCharsLegacy` would need to be duplicated
for the new code, I instead moved those parts into `COOKED_READ_DATA`.
That way we can now have the interactive transform of the prompt (=
Ctrl+C -> ^C) and the two text functions (measure text & actually write
text) are now agnostic to this transformation.
Closes#16034Closes#16044
## Validation Steps Performed
* A vision impaired user checked it out and it seemed fine ✅
(cherry picked from commit e1c69a99ce)
Service-Card-Id: 90891693
Service-Version: 1.19
cd6b083 had 2 issues:
* Improper testing with Ctrl+M instead of Edit > Mark.
* Wrong SelectionState function being used. When the selection is
initiated without keyboard or mouse, `IsKeyboardMarkSelection`
returns false. The proper function to use is `IsLineSelection`.
Closes#15153
## Validation Steps Performed
* Run Far
* Start selection via Edit>Mark
* Hold Alt while dragging to make a rectangular selection
* Right click
* Clipboard contains a rectangular copy ✅
(cherry picked from commit d496a5fb80)
Service-Card-Id: 90886368
Service-Version: 1.19
This restores the original code from before 821ae3a where
the `.GetMainBuffer()` call was accidentally removed.
Closes#16158
## Validation Steps Performed
* Run this Python script:
```py
import sys
while True:
sys.stdout.write("\033[?1049h")
sys.stdout.flush()
sys.stdin.readline()
sys.stdout.write("\033[?1049l")
```
* Press enter repeatedly
* Doesn't crash ✅
(cherry picked from commit 08f30330d1)
Service-Card-Id: 90861143
Service-Version: 1.19
eb871bf fails to properly handle REG_SZ strings, which are documented as
being null-terminated _and_ length restricted.
`wcsnlen` is the perfect fit for handling this situation as it returns
the position of the first \0, or the given length parameter.
As a drive by improvement, this also drops some redundant code:
* `to_environment_strings_w` which is the same as `to_string`
* Retrieving `USERNAME`/`USERDOMAIN` via `LookupAccountSidW` and
`COMPUTERNAME` via `GetComputerNameW` is not necessary as the
variables are "volatile" and I believe there's generally no
expectation that they change unless you log in again.
Closes#16051
## Validation Steps Performed
* Run this in PowerShell to insert a env value with \0:
```pwsh
$hklm = [Microsoft.Win32.RegistryKey]::OpenBaseKey(
[Microsoft.Win32.RegistryHive]::LocalMachine,
0
)
$key = $hklm.OpenSubKey(
'SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Control\Session Manager\Environment',
$true
)
$key.SetValue('test', "foo`0bar")
```
* All `EnvTests` still pass ✅
* (Don't forget to remove the above value again!)
(cherry picked from commit 64b5b2884a)
Service-Card-Id: 90879164
Service-Version: 1.19
Guess what _doesn't_ have the same layout as a bitmap? A `til::color`.
Noticed in 1.19.
Regressed in #16006
(cherry picked from commit 1745857407)
Service-Card-Id: 90758500
Service-Version: 1.19
This fixes a cosmetic issue with the version number in the unpackaged
builds and NuGet packages.
They were showing up as `-preview`, even when they were stable, because
the variable template didn't know about the branding.
(cherry picked from commit 544cdd78af)
Service-Card-Id: 90786432
Service-Version: 1.19
Wrap single quotes to drag and dropped paths in WSL
## References and Relevant Issues
#15646 , #8109
## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments
First time contributor, from what I understand from reading #15646 and #8109 , issue is asking for single quotes added to a drag and dropped path always, regardless of whitespace and special characters, in WSL.
## Validation Steps Performed
Tested drag and drop changes in WSL and non WSL sources.
Closes#15646
As in the title. Also fixes a crash for refrigeration with the rainbow
border.
Closes#16211
Tested by manually forcing us into Windows 10 mode (to refrigerate the
window). That immediately repros the bug, which was simple enough to
fix.
The initial cooked read (= conhost readline) rewrite had two flaws:
* Using viewport scrolls under ConPTY to avoid emitting newlines
resulted in various bugs around marks, coloring, etc. It's still
somewhat unclear why this happened, but the next issue is related and
much worse.
* Rewriting the input line every time causes problems with accessibility
tools, as they'll re-announce unchanged parts again and again.
The solution to these is to simply stop writing the unchanged parts of
the prompt. To do this, code was added to measure the size of text
without actually inserting them into the buffer. Since this meant that
the "interactive" mode of `WriteCharsLegacy` would need to be duplicated
for the new code, I instead moved those parts into `COOKED_READ_DATA`.
That way we can now have the interactive transform of the prompt (=
Ctrl+C -> ^C) and the two text functions (measure text & actually write
text) are now agnostic to this transformation.
Closes#16034Closes#16044
## Validation Steps Performed
* A vision impaired user checked it out and it seemed fine ✅
cd6b083 had 2 issues:
* Improper testing with Ctrl+M instead of Edit > Mark.
* Wrong SelectionState function being used. When the selection is
initiated without keyboard or mouse, `IsKeyboardMarkSelection`
returns false. The proper function to use is `IsLineSelection`.
Closes#15153
## Validation Steps Performed
* Run Far
* Start selection via Edit>Mark
* Hold Alt while dragging to make a rectangular selection
* Right click
* Clipboard contains a rectangular copy ✅
This restores the original code from before 821ae3a where
the `.GetMainBuffer()` call was accidentally removed.
Closes#16158
## Validation Steps Performed
* Run this Python script:
```py
import sys
while True:
sys.stdout.write("\033[?1049h")
sys.stdout.flush()
sys.stdin.readline()
sys.stdout.write("\033[?1049l")
```
* Press enter repeatedly
* Doesn't crash ✅
eb871bf fails to properly handle REG_SZ strings, which are documented as
being null-terminated _and_ length restricted.
`wcsnlen` is the perfect fit for handling this situation as it returns
the position of the first \0, or the given length parameter.
As a drive by improvement, this also drops some redundant code:
* `to_environment_strings_w` which is the same as `to_string`
* Retrieving `USERNAME`/`USERDOMAIN` via `LookupAccountSidW` and
`COMPUTERNAME` via `GetComputerNameW` is not necessary as the
variables are "volatile" and I believe there's generally no
expectation that they change unless you log in again.
Closes#16051
## Validation Steps Performed
* Run this in PowerShell to insert a env value with \0:
```pwsh
$hklm = [Microsoft.Win32.RegistryKey]::OpenBaseKey(
[Microsoft.Win32.RegistryHive]::LocalMachine,
0
)
$key = $hklm.OpenSubKey(
'SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Control\Session Manager\Environment',
$true
)
$key.SetValue('test', "foo`0bar")
```
* All `EnvTests` still pass ✅
* (Don't forget to remove the above value again!)
This addresses the following issues:
* The JSON Schema spec doesn't actually define whether objects with
a "properties" key still require `"type": "object"` or not.
VS Code for instance largely pretends as if it's implied, but when it
encounters them inside a `oneOf` tree, then it behaves as if it isn't.
In other words, we need to always set `"type": "object"`.
* Declaring an `oneOf` containing a `"type": "string"` and an `enum`
doesn't work, because if one of the `enum` cases is given, it results
in both variants to match, since any `enum` is also a `string`.
We have to use `anyOf` instead.
* `SuggestionSource` used `"BuiltinSuggestionSource"` inside a `type`
key which doesn't work. We have to use `$ref` for that.
Closes#13387
## Validation Steps Performed
* VS Code stops complaining ✅
* https://www.jsonschemavalidator.net/✅
## Summary of the Pull Request
Dependency support is now GA in WinGet. Updating the instructions in
README
## References and Relevant Issues
## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments
## Validation Steps Performed
## PR Checklist
- [ ] Closes #xxx
- [ ] 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 fixes a cosmetic issue with the version number in the unpackaged
builds and NuGet packages.
They were showing up as `-preview`, even when they were stable, because
the variable template didn't know about the branding.
If you're already in the "output" state, then an app requesting an
"output" mark probably shouldn't end the current mark and start a new
one. It should just keep on keepin' on.
The decision to end the previous one was arbitrary in the first place,
so let's arbitrarily change it back.
Especially noticable if you hit <kbd>Enter</kbd> during a command,
because the auto-mark prompt work will do a CommandEnd, so long-running
commands will get broken into multiple marks 🥲
This pull request also removes the original release and nightly
pipelines, but it does not remove the release pipeline _template_.
I had to demote the Azure job from being a _deployment_ to being a plain
old job, unfortunately. Alas! Review with whitespace disabled (or `git
diff -w`).
`GetAt` can throw if the index is out of range. We don't check that in
some places. This fixes some of those.
I don't think this will take care of #15689, but it might help?
(cherry picked from commit 5aadddaea9)
Service-Card-Id: 90731981
Service-Version: 1.19
`GetAt` can throw if the index is out of range. We don't check that in
some places. This fixes some of those.
I don't think this will take care of #15689, but it might help?
## Summary of the Pull Request
> ## Abstract
>
> Multiple related scenarios have come up where it would be beneficial
to display
> actionable UI to the user within the context of the active terminal
itself. This
> UI would be akin to the Intellisense UI in Visual Studio. It appears
right where
> the user is typing, and can help provide immediate content for the
user, based
> on some context. The "Suggestions UI" is this new ephemeral UI within
the
> Windows Terminal that can display different types of actions, from
different
> sources.
>
## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments
_\*<sup>\*</sup><sub>\*</sub> read the spec
<sub>\*</sub><sup>\*</sup>\*_
Similar to #14792, a lot of this code is written. This stuff isn't
checked in though, so I'm presenting formally before I start yeeting PRs
out there.
## PR Checklist
- [x] This is a spec for #1595. It also references:
* #3121
* #10436
* #12927
* #12863
Well, Pane doesn't _only_ care if the connection isn't entering a
terminal state. It does need to update its own state first.
Regressed in #15335Closes#16068
(cherry picked from commit 4145f18768)
Service-Card-Id: 90731934
Service-Version: 1.19
Updated the function `TerminalPage::CloseWindow` to include logic for
closing context and flyout menus so that they are dismissed before the
warning is displayed.
Closes#16039
(cherry picked from commit aafb91745e)
Service-Card-Id: 90731989
Service-Version: 1.19
Fixes MSFT:46725264
don't explode trying to parse a URL, if the string wasn't one.
(cherry picked from commit 59aaba7c5b)
Service-Card-Id: 90687770
Service-Version: 1.19
See MSFT:46763065. Looks like we're in the middle of being
`Refrigerate`d, we're pumping messages, and as we pump messages, we get
to a `co_await` in `AppHost::_WindowInitializedHandler`. When we resume,
we just try to use `this` like everything's fine but OH NO, IT'S NOT.
To fix this, I'm
* Adding `enable_shared_from_this` to `AppHost`
* Holding the `AppHost` in a shared_ptr in WindowThread
- though, this is a singular owning `shared_ptr`. This is probably ripe
for other footguns, but there's little we can do about this.
* whenever we `co_await` in `AppHost`, make sure we grab a weak ref
first, and check it on the other side.
This is another "squint and yep that's a bug" fix, that I haven't been
able to verify locally. This is
[allegedly](https://media.tenor.com/VQi3bktwLdIAAAAC/allegedly-supposedly.gif)
about 10% of our 1.19 crashes after 3 days.
Closes#16061
(cherry picked from commit 8521aae889)
Service-Card-Id: 90731962
Service-Version: 1.19
Wow our preview population must just not use `startupActions`. This
obviously never worked in 1.18 Preview.
Closes#16050
(cherry picked from commit f6425dbd59)
Service-Card-Id: 90715243
Service-Version: 1.19
Well, Pane doesn't _only_ care if the connection isn't entering a
terminal state. It does need to update its own state first.
Regressed in #15335Closes#16068
Updated the function `TerminalPage::CloseWindow` to include logic for
closing context and flyout menus so that they are dismissed before the
warning is displayed.
Closes#16039
See MSFT:46763065. Looks like we're in the middle of being
`Refrigerate`d, we're pumping messages, and as we pump messages, we get
to a `co_await` in `AppHost::_WindowInitializedHandler`. When we resume,
we just try to use `this` like everything's fine but OH NO, IT'S NOT.
To fix this, I'm
* Adding `enable_shared_from_this` to `AppHost`
* Holding the `AppHost` in a shared_ptr in WindowThread
- though, this is a singular owning `shared_ptr`. This is probably ripe
for other footguns, but there's little we can do about this.
* whenever we `co_await` in `AppHost`, make sure we grab a weak ref
first, and check it on the other side.
This is another "squint and yep that's a bug" fix, that I haven't been
able to verify locally. This is
[allegedly](https://media.tenor.com/VQi3bktwLdIAAAAC/allegedly-supposedly.gif)
about 10% of our 1.19 crashes after 3 days.
Closes#16061
This pipeline does everything the existing release pipeline does, except
it does it using the OneBranch official templates.
Most of our existing build infrastructure has been reused, with the
following changes:
- We are no longer using `job-submit-windows-vpack`, as OneBranch does
this for us.
- `job-merge-msix-into-bundle` now supports afterBuildSteps, which we
use to stage the msixbundle into the right place for the vpack
- `job-build-project` supports deleting all non-signed files (which the
OneBranch post-build validation requires)
- `job-build-project` now deletes `console.dll`, which is unused in any
of our builds, because XFGCheck blows up on it for some reason on x86
- `job-publish-symbols` now supports two different types of PAT
ingestion
- I have pulled out the NuGet filename variables into a shared variables
template
I have also introduced a TSA config (which files bugs on us for binary
analysis failures as well as using the word 'sucks' and stuff.)
I have also baselined a number of control flow guard/binary analysis
failures.
(cherry picked from commit 6489f6b39d)
Service-Card-Id: 90706777
Service-Version: 1.19
This pipeline does everything the existing release pipeline does, except
it does it using the OneBranch official templates.
Most of our existing build infrastructure has been reused, with the
following changes:
- We are no longer using `job-submit-windows-vpack`, as OneBranch does
this for us.
- `job-merge-msix-into-bundle` now supports afterBuildSteps, which we
use to stage the msixbundle into the right place for the vpack
- `job-build-project` supports deleting all non-signed files (which the
OneBranch post-build validation requires)
- `job-build-project` now deletes `console.dll`, which is unused in any
of our builds, because XFGCheck blows up on it for some reason on x86
- `job-publish-symbols` now supports two different types of PAT
ingestion
- I have pulled out the NuGet filename variables into a shared variables
template
I have also introduced a TSA config (which files bugs on us for binary
analysis failures as well as using the word 'sucks' and stuff.)
I have also baselined a number of control flow guard/binary analysis
failures.
The version we were using requires .NET 2.1 (wow) which is way out of
support.
Task version 3 supports much newer versions.
(cherry picked from commit ac2b0e744c)
Service-Card-Id: 90688108
Service-Version: 1.19
Control Flow Guard requires both linker and compiler flags.
It turns out that the MSVC build rules determine whether to _link_ with
CFG based on whether it compiled anything with CFG.
It also turns out that when you don't compile anything (such as in our
DLL projects that only consume a static library!), the build rules can't
guess whether to link with CFG.
Whoops.
We need to force it.
(cherry picked from commit 1b143e34a8)
Service-Card-Id: 90688105
Service-Version: 1.19
Found this while looking through dumps for failure
`f544cf8e-1879-c59b-3f0b-1a364b92b974`. That's MSFT:45210947. (1% of our
1.19 crashes)
From the dump I looked at,
Looks like,
* we're on Windows 10
* We're refrigerating a window
* We are pumping the remaining XAML messages as we refrigerate
(`_pumpRemainingXamlMessages`)
* In there, we're finally getting the
`TerminalPage::_CompleteInitialization`
* that calls up to the `_root->Initialized` lambda set up in
`TerminalWindow::Initialize`
* There it tries to get the launch mode from the settings, and explodes.
Presumably _settings is null, but can't see in this dump.
so the window is closing before it's initialized.
When we `_warmWindow = std::move(_host->Refrigerate())`, we call
`AppHost::Refrigerate`, which will null out the TerminalWindow. So when
we're getting to `TerminalWindow::Initialize`, we're calling that on a
nullptr. That's the trick.
We need to revoke the internal Initialized callback. Which makes sense.
It's a lambda that binds _this_ 🤦
---
After more looking, it really doesn't _seem_ like the stacks that are
tracked in `f544cf8e-1879-c59b-3f0b-1a364b92b974` look like the same
stack that I was debugging, but this _is_ a realy issue regardless.
(cherry picked from commit 7073ec01bf)
Service-Card-Id: 90672654
Service-Version: 1.19
f1aa699 was fundamentally incorrect as it used `IdnToAscii` and
`IdnToUnicode` on the entire URL, even though these functions only work
on domain names. This commit fixes the issue by using the WinRT `Url`
class and its `AbsoluteUri` and `AbsoluteCanonicalUri` getters.
The algorithm still works the same way though.
Closes#16017
## Validation Steps Performed
* ``"`e]8;;https://www.xn--fcbook-3nf5b.com/`e\test`e]8;;`e\"``
still shows as two URLs in the popup ✅
* Shows the given URI if it's canonical and not an IDN ✅
* Works with >100 char long file:// URIs ✅
(cherry picked from commit 198c11f36d)
Service-Card-Id: 90642844
Service-Version: 1.19
One day into 1.19, and there's a LOT of hits here (**76.25%** of our
~300 crashes). A crash if the Theme doesn't have a `tab` member.
Regressed in #15948
Closes MSFT:46714723
(cherry picked from commit cf193858f6)
Service-Card-Id: 90670731
Service-Version: 1.19
Control Flow Guard requires both linker and compiler flags.
It turns out that the MSVC build rules determine whether to _link_ with
CFG based on whether it compiled anything with CFG.
It also turns out that when you don't compile anything (such as in our
DLL projects that only consume a static library!), the build rules can't
guess whether to link with CFG.
Whoops.
We need to force it.
Unfortunately, the appLicensing restricted capability we used to make
Canary installable without the store only works on Windows 11. Because
of that, we have to restrict the app package to Windows 11 and above.
I'd rather not leave Windows 10 users out in the cold, so this pull
request also publishes Canary builds to the public storage bucket with
the name `Microsoft.WindowsTerminalCanary_latest_x64.zip` (etc.)
The version number will be kept inside the archive. It remains to be
seen whether that is a good idea!
When combined with #16048, Canary builds from Azure will automatically
run in portable mode!
I also added support to the unpackaged distribution script to produce
portable mode packages. It is off by default for AppX->ZIP builds and
**on** by default for Layout->ZIP builds.
This constitutes a change in behavior.
Found this while looking through dumps for failure
`f544cf8e-1879-c59b-3f0b-1a364b92b974`. That's MSFT:45210947. (1% of our
1.19 crashes)
From the dump I looked at,
Looks like,
* we're on Windows 10
* We're refrigerating a window
* We are pumping the remaining XAML messages as we refrigerate
(`_pumpRemainingXamlMessages`)
* In there, we're finally getting the
`TerminalPage::_CompleteInitialization`
* that calls up to the `_root->Initialized` lambda set up in
`TerminalWindow::Initialize`
* There it tries to get the launch mode from the settings, and explodes.
Presumably _settings is null, but can't see in this dump.
so the window is closing before it's initialized.
When we `_warmWindow = std::move(_host->Refrigerate())`, we call
`AppHost::Refrigerate`, which will null out the TerminalWindow. So when
we're getting to `TerminalWindow::Initialize`, we're calling that on a
nullptr. That's the trick.
We need to revoke the internal Initialized callback. Which makes sense.
It's a lambda that binds _this_ 🤦
---
After more looking, it really doesn't _seem_ like the stacks that are
tracked in `f544cf8e-1879-c59b-3f0b-1a364b92b974` look like the same
stack that I was debugging, but this _is_ a realy issue regardless.
f1aa699 was fundamentally incorrect as it used `IdnToAscii` and
`IdnToUnicode` on the entire URL, even though these functions only work
on domain names. This commit fixes the issue by using the WinRT `Url`
class and its `AbsoluteUri` and `AbsoluteCanonicalUri` getters.
The algorithm still works the same way though.
Closes#16017
## Validation Steps Performed
* ``"`e]8;;https://www.xn--fcbook-3nf5b.com/`e\test`e]8;;`e\"``
still shows as two URLs in the popup ✅
* Shows the given URI if it's canonical and not an IDN ✅
* Works with >100 char long file:// URIs ✅
One day into 1.19, and there's a LOT of hits here (**76.25%** of our
~300 crashes). A crash if the Theme doesn't have a `tab` member.
Regressed in #15948
Closes MSFT:46714723
The `GenRTF(...)` was using `\highlight` control word for sending
background text color in the RTF format during a copy command. This
doesn't work correctly, since many applications (E.g. MSWord) don't
support full RGB with `\highlight`, and instead uses an approximation of
what is received. For example, `rgb(197, 15, 31)` becomes `rgb(255, 0,
255)`. Also, the standard way of using background colors is `\cbN`
control word, which isn't supported as per the [RTF Spec 1.9.1]
in Word.
But it briefly mentioned a workaround at Pg. 23, which seems to work on
all the RTF editors I tested.
The PR makes the changes to use `\chshdng0\chcbpatN` for the background
coloring.
Also did some refactoring to make the implementation concise.
## Validation Steps Performed
Verified that the background is correctly copied on below editors:
- MSWord
- WordPad
- LibreOffice
- Outlook
[RTF Spec 1.9.1]: https://msopenspecs.azureedge.net/files/Archive_References/[MSFT-RTF].pdf
Subjectively speaking, this commit makes 3 improvements:
* Most importantly, it now would work with arbitrary Unicode text.
(No more `IsGlyphFullWidth` or DBCS handling during reflow.)
* Due to the simpler implementation it hopefully makes review of
future changes and maintenance simpler. (~3x less LOC.)
* It improves perf. by 1-2 orders of magnitude.
(At 120x9001 with a full buffer I get 60ms -> 2ms.)
Unfortunately, I'm not confident that the new code replicates the old
code exactly, because I failed to understand it. During development
I simply tried to match its behavior with what I think reflow should do.
Closes#797Closes#3088Closes#4968Closes#6546Closes#6901Closes#15964
Closes MSFT:19446208
Related to #5800 and #8000
## Validation Steps Performed
* Unit tests ✅
* Feature tests ✅
* Reflow with a scrollback ✅
* Reflowing the cursor cell causes a forced line-wrap ✅
(Even at the end of the buffer. ✅)
* `color 8f` and reflowing retains the background color ✅
* Enter alt buffer, Resize window, Exit alt buffer ✅
(cherry picked from commit 74748394c1)
Service-Card-Id: 90642727
Service-Version: 1.19
A carriage return (enter key) will increase the _distanceEnd by up to
viewport-width many columns, since it increases the Y distance between
the start and end by 1 (it's a newline after all).
This will make _flushBuffer() think that the new _buffer is way longer
than the old one and so _erase() ends up not erasing the tail end of
the prompt, even if the new prompt is actually shorter.
This commit fixes the issue by separating the newline printing
out from the regular text printing loops.
## Validation Steps Performed
* Run cmd.exe
* Write "echo hello" and press Enter
* Write "foobar foo bar" (don't press Enter)
* Press F7, select "echo hello" and press Enter
* Previous prompt says "echo hello" ✅
(cherry picked from commit c7f30a86d7)
Service-Card-Id: 90642765
Service-Version: 1.19
With us adding a .appinstaller distribution of Canary, the Store
services update checker has beome insufficient to determine whether
there are package updates.
App Installer supports us checking for updates by using PackageManager
and the Package interfaces.
We'll use those instead of the Store services interface, and bail out
early if the App Installer gives us an answer.
(cherry picked from commit e0fc3bcd0a)
Service-Card-Id: 90644882
Service-Version: 1.19
Subjectively speaking, this commit makes 3 improvements:
* Most importantly, it now would work with arbitrary Unicode text.
(No more `IsGlyphFullWidth` or DBCS handling during reflow.)
* Due to the simpler implementation it hopefully makes review of
future changes and maintenance simpler. (~3x less LOC.)
* It improves perf. by 1-2 orders of magnitude.
(At 120x9001 with a full buffer I get 60ms -> 2ms.)
Unfortunately, I'm not confident that the new code replicates the old
code exactly, because I failed to understand it. During development
I simply tried to match its behavior with what I think reflow should do.
Closes#797Closes#3088Closes#4968Closes#6546Closes#6901Closes#15964
Closes MSFT:19446208
Related to #5800 and #8000
## Validation Steps Performed
* Unit tests ✅
* Feature tests ✅
* Reflow with a scrollback ✅
* Reflowing the cursor cell causes a forced line-wrap ✅
(Even at the end of the buffer. ✅)
* `color 8f` and reflowing retains the background color ✅
* Enter alt buffer, Resize window, Exit alt buffer ✅
A carriage return (enter key) will increase the _distanceEnd by up to
viewport-width many columns, since it increases the Y distance between
the start and end by 1 (it's a newline after all).
This will make _flushBuffer() think that the new _buffer is way longer
than the old one and so _erase() ends up not erasing the tail end of
the prompt, even if the new prompt is actually shorter.
This commit fixes the issue by separating the newline printing
out from the regular text printing loops.
## Validation Steps Performed
* Run cmd.exe
* Write "echo hello" and press Enter
* Write "foobar foo bar" (don't press Enter)
* Press F7, select "echo hello" and press Enter
* Previous prompt says "echo hello" ✅
With us adding a .appinstaller distribution of Canary, the Store
services update checker has beome insufficient to determine whether
there are package updates.
App Installer supports us checking for updates by using PackageManager
and the Package interfaces.
We'll use those instead of the Store services interface, and bail out
early if the App Installer gives us an answer.
After the nightly build completes, we'll automatically generate a
.appinstaller and publich it plus the msixbundle to an Azure Storage
account.
I had to add step/job customization to the publish step in the full
release pipeline template.
The .appinstaller hardcodes our XAML dependency, which makes it a bit of
a pain. We can revisit this later, and publish our dependencies
directly and automatically instead of hardcoding them.
I am considering moving the appinstaller generation step to the MSIX
bundling job, but this works right now and is not too terrible.
Closes#774
When launching a debug Terminal, `_initializedTerminal` might still be false and the scrollbar might still be 0px tall. This causes the `assert(false)` condition within `_throttledUpdateScrollbar` to be hit.
Regressed in #16006
Previously, all unknown escape sequences would lead to an immediate call
to `VtEngine::_Flush()`. This lead to problems with nushell which uses
FTCS marks that were unknown to us. Combined with the linewise redrawing
that nushell does, Terminal would get the prompt in two separate frames,
causing a slight flickering.
#14677 fixed this by suppressing the `_Flush()` call when unknown
sequences are encountered. Unfortunately, this triggered a bug due
to our somewhat "inconsistent" architecture in conhost:
`XtermEngine::WriteTerminalW` isn't just used to flush unknown sequences
but also used directly by `InputBuffer::PassThroughWin32MouseRequest`
to write its mouse sequence directly to the ConPTY host.
`VtEngine` already contains a number of specialized member functions
like `RequestWin32Input()` to ensure that `_Flush()` is called
immediately and another member could've been added to solve this issue.
This commit now adds `RequestMouseMode` in the same vein.
But I believe we can make the system more robust in general by using
eager flushing by default (= safe), similar to how a `write()` on a
TCP socket flushes by default, and instead only selectively pause and
unpause flushing with a system similar to `TCP_CORK`.
This seems to work fairly well, as it solves:
* The original nushell bug
* The new bug
* Improves overall throughput by ~33% (due to less flushing)
In particular the last point is noteworthy, as this commit removes
the last performance bottleneck in ConPTY that isn't `VtEngine`.
Around ~95% of all CPU and wall time is spent in there now and any
improvements to `VtEngine` should yield immediately results.
Closes#15711
## Validation Steps Performed
* Clone/Run https://github.com/chrisant996/repro_enable_mouse_input
* Hold Ctrl+Alt and circle with the mouse over the viewport
* Repro.exe prints the current cursor coordinates ✅
* Run nushell
* No flickering when typing in the prompt ✅
The Win32 API is significantly faster than the WinRT one, in the order
of around 300-1000x depending on the CPU and CPU load.
This might slightly improve the situation around #15315, but I suspect
that it requires many more fixes. For instance, we don't really have a
single text input "queue" into which we write. Multiple routines that
`resume_background` just to `WriteFile` into the input pipe are thus
racing against each other, contributing to the laggy feeling.
I also fear that the modern Windows text stack might be inherently
RPC based too, producing worse lag with rising CPU load.
This might fix#14323
## Validation Steps Performed
* Paste text from Edge ✅
* Paste text from Notepad ✅
* Right click the address bar in Explorer, choose "Copy address",
paste text into WT ✅
---------
Co-authored-by: Dustin L. Howett <duhowett@microsoft.com>
This commit fixes 2 issues:
* `ControlCore::ScrollMarks()` would call `ResetIfStale`
again while the search prompt hasn't changed.
This has been fixed by using `_cachedSearchResultRows` as
the indicator for whether it needs to be recreated or not.
* While typing a search query, the selection would move among the
results with each typed character, because `MovePastCurrentSelection`
would do what its name indicates. It has been renamed and rewritten
to be `MoveToCurrentSelection`. To avoid breaking UIA, the previous
`MovePastPoint` implementation was kept.
Since the new `MoveToCurrentSelection` function would not move past the
current selection anymore, changing the direction would not move past
the current result either. To fix this, we now don't invalidate the
search cache when changing the direction.
Closes#15954
## Validation Steps Performed
* Run ``"helloworld`n"*20`` in pwsh
* Search for "helloworld"
* While typing the characters the selection doesn't move ✅
* ...nor when searching downwards ✅
* ...nor when erasing parts of it ✅
* ...and it behaves identical in conhost ✅
`ImmersiveColorSet` gets sent more often than just on a theme change. It notably gets sent when the PC is locked, or the UAC prompt opens.
## Validation Steps Performed
Tested manually by setting the font to `garbo`and:
* locking, then logging back in. No dialog ✅
* UAC via run dialog + `regedit`. No dialog ✅
* Actually changing the OS theme. Dialog ✅Closes#15732
As mentioned in #15760
> > When you right-click on a non-active pane, it becomes active, but the context menu may be displayed before this happens, thus showing the Restart Connection item based the wrong pane's status.
>
> As far as I can see, when a pane is (right)clicked:
>
> 1. If unfocused, `Focus` is called. This goes through the `GotFocus` handler which eventually calls `tab->_UpdateActivePane(sender);`
> 2. `PointerPressed` is raised which eventually shows the context menu
>
> The first point is done asynchronously, so may update the active pane too late when the menu is already displayed (despite both end up in the UI thread).
To fix this: we plumb the control that the context menu was opened for all the way through to where the event is actually handled (in `_PopulateContextMenu`)
* [x] Tested manually
Co-authored-by: Marco Pelagatti <1140981+mpela81@users.noreply.github.com>
Saving the SUI with an empty "keys" will persist `"keys": ""` to the
JSON.
The keychord parser tries to parse that.
`KeyChordSerialization.cpp@_fromString` returns a KeyChord with both
vkey and scancode set to 0, and the ctor asserts and explodes.
We shouldn't do that.
Closes#13221
I noticed this last week, but forgot to file. If you have a pair of
splits, and `exit -1` the first, you can't use `enter` to restart it.
This PR fixes that. Basically, `TerminalPage` registers it's
`_restartPaneConnection` handler when it makes a new `Pane` object. It
registers the callback straight to the `Pane`. However, when a `Pane`
gets split, it makes a _new_ `Pane` object, and moves the original
content into the new pane. `TerminalPage` however, would never hook up
its own callback to that newly created pane.
This fixes that.
This pull request moves HwndTerminal into Microsoft.Terminal.Control.Lib
and removes PublicTerminalCore completely.
Microsoft.Terminal.Control.dll now exports the C API from HwndTerminal.
This adds ~100kb to Microsoft.Terminal.Control.dll and ~1400kb to the
WPF package (per architecture) but with the coming interactivity
platform merge it's going to benefit us big time.
This replaces the use of a `<Canvas>` with an `<Image>` for drawing
scrollbar marks. Otherwise, WinUI struggles with the up to ~9000 UI
elements as they get dirtied every time the scrollbar moves.
(FWIW 9000 is not a lot and it should not struggle with that.)
The `<Image>` element has the benefit that we can get hold of a CPU-side
bitmap which we can manually draw our marks into and then swap them into
the UI tree. It draws the same 9000 elements, but now WinUI doesn't
struggle anymore because only 1 element gets invalidated every time.
Closes#15955
## Validation Steps Performed
* Fill the buffer with "e"
* Searching for "e" fills the entire thumb range with white ✅
* ...doesn't lag when scrolling around ✅
* ...updates quickly when adding newlines at the end ✅
* Marks sort of align with their scroll position ✅
Adding enum iconstyle for hiding the icon in the tab #8157
## Summary of the Pull Request
Please confirm if I am on the right track.
## References and Relevant Issues
## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments
## Validation Steps Performed
## PR Checklist
- [ ] Closes#8157
- [x] 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 PR is a few things:
* part the first: Convert the `compatibility.reloadEnvironmentVariables`
setting to a per-profile one.
* The settings should migrate it from the user's old global place to the
new one.
* We also added it to "Profile>Advanced" while I was here.
* Adds a new pair of commandline flags to `new-tab` and `split-pane`:
`--inheritEnvironment` / `--reloadEnvironment`
* On `wt` launch, bundle the entire environment that `wt` was spawned
with, and put it into the `Remoting.CommandlineArgs`, and give them to
the monarch (and ultimately, down to `TerminalPage` with the
`AppCommandlineArgs`). DO THIS ALWAYS.
* As a part of this, we’ll default to _reloading_ if there’s no explicit
commandline set, and _inheriting_ if there is.
* For example, `wt -- cmd` would inherit, and `wt -p “Command Prompt”`
would reload.[^1]
* This is a little wacky, but we’re trying to separate out the
intentions here:
* `wt -- cmd` feels like “I want to run cmd.exe (in a terminal tab)”.
That feels like the user would _like_ environment variables from the
calling process. They’re doing something more manual, so they get more
refined control over it.
* `wt` (or `wt -p “Command Prompt”`) is more like, “I want to run the
Terminal (or, my Command Prompt profile) using whatever the Terminal
would normally do”. So that feels more like a situation where it should
just reload by default. (Of course, this will respect their settings
here)
## References and Relevant Issues
https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/issues/15496#issuecomment-1692450231
has more notes.
## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments
This is so VERY much plumbing. I'll try to leave comments in the
interesting parts.
## PR Checklist
- [x] This is not _all_ of #15496. We're also going to do a `-E foo=bar`
arg on top of this.
- [x] Tests added/passed
- [x] Schema updated
[^1]: In both these cases, plus the `environment` setting, of course.
## Summary of the Pull Request
When a connection is Closed, show an indicator in the respective tab.
When the active pane's connection is Closed, show a "Restart Connection"
action in the right-click context menu and in the tab context menu.
## Validation Steps Performed
- Force close a connection, check the indicator is shown in the tab.
- Right-click on pane shows the Restart Connection action if its
connection is closed
- Right-click on tab shows the Restart Connection action if the active
pane's connection is closed
- Indicator is cleared after connection is restarted (no panes in closed
state)
## PR Checklist
- [x] Closes#14909
- [x] Tests added/passed
- [ ] Documentation updated
- [ ] Schema updated (if necessary)
Since the "delete color scheme" button is filled with an icon and a Text
Box, the text is not automatically exposed as the autoProp.Name for the
button. We have to do it manually just like we do for "delete profile".
Validated manually using accessibility insights
Closes#15984
`Terminal` is used concurrently by at least 4 threads. The table
below lists the class members and the threads that access them
to the best of my knowledge. Where:
* UI: UI Thread
* BG: Background worker threads (`winrt::resume_background`)
* RD: Render thread
* VT: VT connection thread
| | UI | BG | RD | VT |
|------------------------------------|----|----|----|----|
| `_pfnWriteInput` | x | x | | x |
| `_pfnWarningBell` | | | | x |
| `_pfnTitleChanged` | | | | x |
| `_pfnCopyToClipboard` | | | | x |
| `_pfnScrollPositionChanged` | x | x | | x |
| `_pfnCursorPositionChanged` | | | | x |
| `_pfnTaskbarProgressChanged` | | | | x |
| `_pfnShowWindowChanged` | | | | x |
| `_pfnPlayMidiNote` | | | | x |
| `_pfnCompletionsChanged` | | | | x |
| `_renderSettings` | x | | x | x |
| `_stateMachine` | x | | | x |
| `_terminalInput` | x | | | x |
| `_title` | x | | x | x |
| `_startingTitle` | x | | x | |
| `_startingTabColor` | x | | | |
| `_defaultCursorShape` | x | | | x |
| `_systemMode` | | x | x | x |
| `_snapOnInput` | x | x | | |
| `_altGrAliasing` | x | | | |
| `_suppressApplicationTitle` | x | | | x |
| `_trimBlockSelection` | x | | | |
| `_autoMarkPrompts` | x | | | |
| `_taskbarState` | x | | | x |
| `_taskbarProgress` | x | | | x |
| `_workingDirectory` | x | | | x |
| `_fontInfo` | x | | x | |
| `_selection` | x | x | x | x |
| `_blockSelection` | x | x | x | |
| `_wordDelimiters` | x | x | | |
| `_multiClickSelectionMode` | x | x | x | |
| `_selectionMode` | x | x | x | |
| `_selectionIsTargetingUrl` | x | x | x | |
| `_selectionEndpoint` | x | x | x | |
| `_anchorInactiveSelectionEndpoint` | x | x | x | |
| `_mainBuffer` | x | x | x | x |
| `_altBuffer` | x | x | x | x |
| `_mutableViewport` | x | | x | x |
| `_scrollbackLines` | x | | | |
| `_detectURLs` | x | | | |
| `_altBufferSize` | x | x | x | x |
| `_deferredResize` | x | | | x |
| `_scrollOffset` | x | x | x | x |
| `_patternIntervalTree` | x | x | x | x |
| `_lastKeyEventCodes` | x | | | |
| `_currentPromptState` | x | | | x |
Only 7 members are specific to one thread and don't require locking.
All other members require some for of locking to be safe for use.
To address the issue this changeset adds `LockForReading/LockForWriting`
calls everywhere `_terminal` is accessed in `ControlCore/HwndTerminal`.
Additionally, to ensure these issues don't pop up anymore, it adds to
all `Terminal` functions a debug assertion that the lock is being held.
Finally, because this changeset started off rather modest, it contains
changes that I initially made without being aware about the extent of
the issue. It simplifies the access around `_patternIntervalTree` by
making `_InvalidatePatternTree()` directly use that member.
Furthermore, it simplifies `_terminal->SetCursorOn(!IsCursorOn())` to
`BlinkCursor()`, allowing the code to be shared with `HwndTerminal`.
Ideally `Terminal` should not be that much of a class so that we don't
need such coarse locking. Splitting out selection and rendering state
should allow deduplicating code with conhost and use finer locking.
Closes#9617
## Validation Steps Performed
I tried to use as many Windows Terminal features as I could and fixed
every occurrence of `_assertLocked()` failures.
## Summary of the Pull Request
Resolves the following in #15812
> - [x] `toggleBroadcastInput` isn't in the default settings
> - [x] The cursors forget to keep blinking if you focus each pane and
then unfocus them
> - [x] They don't stop blinking when you unbroadcast
> - [x] Broadcast border doesn't appear when you make new panes, but
they ARE broadcasted-to!
## References and Relevant Issues
x-ref:
* #2634
* #14393
## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments
There was literally no logic in the original PR for starting the cursor
blinking. It's entirely unknowable how that ever worked. This makes it
all much more explicit.
We're taking the hacky `DisplayCursorWhileBlurred` from #15363, and
promoting that to the less-hacky `CursorVisibility`. Broadcast input
mode can use that to force the cursor to be visible always.
The last checkbox in that issue is harder, and I didn't want to further
pollute this delta with the paste plumbing.
Previously, the duplication method considered only the next to the selected tab(`tab.TabViewIndex() + 1`) as the insert position. Changed that to consider the setting.
Closes#15776
This is a theoretical improvement for #15553 where Windows Terminal
crashed due to AtlasEngine accessing the soft font bitmap outside of
bounds. The problem is that the soft font cell size was non-zero.
This PR hardens against such situations by checking whether the
requested soft font index is inside the bounds of the bitmaps.
The improvement couldn't be tested as it couldn't be reproduced.
`SetConsoleWindowInfoImpl` calls `PostUpdateWindowSize`, which emits a
`CM_SET_WINDOW_SIZE` event, which causes `_InternalSetWindowSize` to be
called, which calls `ScreenBufferSizeChange` which then finally emits a
`WINDOW_BUFFER_SIZE_EVENT` event into the client input buffer.
This messes up applications like which make use of
`WINDOW_BUFFER_SIZE_EVENT` to perform potentially lossy operations.
In case of SSH this results in a resize (SIGWINCH) of the server-side
screen which similarly may result in a response by the shell, etc.
Since that happens over networks and is async, and because our conhost
VT viewport implementation appears to have a number of subtle bugs,
this results in duplicate output lines (sometimes hundreds).
Under Windows Terminal this issue is not as apparent, since ConPTY has
no viewport that can be moved and no scrollback. It only appears as an
issue if a terminal application reacts poorly to the SIGWINCH event.
Closes#15769
## Validation Steps Performed
* Set a breakpoint in `SynthesizeWindowBufferSizeEvent`
* Launch WSL and cause the viewport to move down
No calls to `SynthesizeWindowBufferSizeEvent` ✅
* Execute `tput reset`
Input line moves to row 0 ✅
WinAppDriver depends on a bunch of .NET assemblies that collide *big time*. Let's just quarantine it.
I kept the fallback to $TESTDIR\WinAppDriver.exe because there's a chance that the Windows build depends on it.
* `[[nodiscard]]` and `[[maybe_unused]]` must come before `virtual` and
`static` qualifiers
* We were calling the jsoncpp constructors directly (again) as functions
(again)
* Some of our preprocessor `#endif` lines were quite messed up
(`-Winvalid-token`)
* One of our test projects was using somebody else's `precomp.h`
Related to #14871
This commit fixes 3 bugs:
* `COOKED_READ_DATA` failed to initialize its `_distanceCursor` and
`_distanceEnd` members. I took this as an opportunity to make them
`ptrdiff_t`, to reduce the likelihood of overflows in the future.
* `COOKED_READ_DATA::_writeChars` added `scrollY` to the written
distance, even though `WriteCharsLegacy` writes a negative value into
that out parameter. This was fixed by changing `WriteCharsLegacy` to
write positive values and by adding a debug assertion.
* `StreamScrollRegion` calls `IncrementCircularBuffer` which causes a
synchronous (!) ConPTY flush to the output pipe (side note: this is
the primary reason why newlines are so slow in ConPTY).
Since cooked reads are supposed to behave like a pager and not write
into the scrollback, we temporarily mark the buffer as inactive
which prevents `TextBuffer` from snitching about it to VtEngine.
Even after this change, there's still some weird behavior left:
* You cannot move your cursor back beyond (0,0), because this isn't a
real pager-like implementation. That might be a neat future extension.
* Writing a lot of text and pressing Ctrl+C doesn't properly place the
cursor and scroll the buffer, unless the cursor is at the end.
That might also be worth investigating in the future (minor issue).
* When the viewport is full, backspacing more than 1 line of text
(using Ctrl+Backspace) doesn't erase all of the affected lines,
because `COOKED_READ_DATA::_erase` uses the same `WriteCharsLegacy`
function to write whitespace to erase that text. It's only gone
after typing one more character.
I've written the code to mostly fix this, but decided against it
as I considered the problem to be too niche to warrant extra code.
Closes#15899
## Validation Steps Performed
* Generate some text to paste in PowerShell:
```pwsh
"" + (0..512 | % { "word" + $_.ToString().PadLeft(4, "0") })
```
* Launch cmd.exe and paste that text
* No flickering ✅
* No writing into the scrollback ✅
* No weird behavior when backspacing ✅
This commit fixes the identity of our new canary packages.
Additionally, it slightly reorders one block so that the file is
almost entirely in the same layout as the preview appxmanifest,
allowing for a better direct comparison (with git diff, etc.).
Underline color sequence _SGR 58_ (unlike *SGR 38*, *SGR 48*) only works
with sub parameters, eg. `\e[58:5:<n>m` or `\e[58:2::<r>:<g>:<b>m` will
work, but something like `\e[58;5;<n>m` won't work. This is a
requirement for the implementation to avoid problems with VT clients
that don't support sub parameters.
## Detailed Description
- Added `underlineColor` to `TextAttribute`, and `UnderlineStyle` into
`CharacterAttributes`.
- Added two new entries in `GraphicOptions` namely, `UnderlineColor`
(58) and `UnderlineColorDefault` (59).
- _SGR 58_ renders a sequence with sub parameters in the VT renderer.
- _SGR 4:x_ renders a sequence with sub parameters in the VT renderer,
except for single, double, and no-underline, which still use
backward-compatible _SGR 4_, _SGR 21_ and _SGR 24_.
- `XtermEngine` will send `\e[4m` without any styling information. This
means all underline style (except NoUnderline) will be rendered as
single underline.
## Reference issues
- #7228
### PR Checklist
- [x] update DECRARA, DECCARA to respect underline color and style.
- [x] update DECRQSS to send underline color and style in the query
response.
- [x] update DECRQPSR/DECRSPS/DECCIR
- [x] Tests added
## Summary of the Pull Request
Closes#7158
Enabling Acrylic as both an appearance setting (with all the plumbing),
allowing it to be set differently in both focused and unfocused
terminals. EnableUnfocusedAcrylic Global Setting that controls if
unfocused acrylic is possible so that people can disable that behavior.
## References and Relevant Issues
#7158 , references: #15913 , #11092
## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments
### Allowing Acrylic to be set differently in both focused and unfocused
terminals:
#### A

#### B

#### C

#### D

``` json
"profiles":
{
"list":
[
{
"commandline": "pwsh.exe",
"name": "A",
"unfocusedAppearance":
{
"useAcrylic": true,
},
"useAcrylic": true,
},
{
"commandline": "pwsh.exe",
"name": "B",
"unfocusedAppearance":
{
"useAcrylic": false,
},
"useAcrylic": true,
},
{
"commandline": "pwsh.exe",
"name": "C",
"unfocusedAppearance":
{
"useAcrylic": true,
},
"useAcrylic": false,
},
{
"commandline": "pwsh.exe",
"name": "D",
"unfocusedAppearance":
{
},
"useAcrylic": false,
},
]
}
```
- **A**: AcrylicBlur always on
- **B**: Acrylic when focused, not acrylic when unfocused
- **C**: Why the hell not. Not Acrylic when focused, Acrylic when
unfocused.
- **D:** Possible today by not using Acrylic.
### EnableUnfocusedACrylic global setting that controls if unfocused
acrylic is possible
So that people can disable that behavior:

### Alternate approaches I considered:
Using `_InitializeBackgroundBrush` call instead of
`_changeBackgroundColor(bg) in
``TermControl::_UpdateAppearanceFromUIThread`. Comments in this function
mentioned:
``` *.cs'
// In the future, this might need to be changed to a
// _InitializeBackgroundBrush call instead, because we may need to
// switch from a solid color brush to an acrylic one.
```
I considered using this to tackle to problem, but don't see the benefit.
The only time we need to update the brush is when the user changes the
`EnableUnfocusedAcrylic ` setting which is already covered by
`fire_and_forget TermControl::UpdateControlSettings`
### Supporting different Opacity in Focused and Unfocused Appearance???
This PR is split up in two parts #7158 covers allowing Acrylic to be set
differently in both focused and unfocused terminals. And
EnableUnfocusedAcrylic Global Setting that controls if unfocused acrylic
is possible so that people can disable that behavior.
#11092 will be about enabling opacity as both an appearance setting,
allowing it to be set differently in both focused and unfocused
terminals.
### Skipping the XAML for now:
“I actually think we may want to skip the XAML on this one for now.
We've been having some discussions about compatibility settings, global
settings, stuff like this, and it might be _more- confusing to have you
do something here. We can always add it in post when we decide where to
put it.”
-- Mike Griese
## Validation Steps Performed
#### When Scrolling Mouse , opacity changes appropriately, on opacity
100 there are no gray lines or artefacts


#### When Adjusting Opacity through command palette, opacity changes
appropriately, on opacity 100 there are no gray lines or artefacts


#### When opening command palette state goes to unfocused, the acrylic
and color change appropriately


#### Stumbled upon a new bug when performing validation steps #15913

## PR Checklist
- [x] Closes#7158
- [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: #xxx
- [x] Schema updated (if necessary)
---------
Co-authored-by: Mike Griese <migrie@microsoft.com>
`TerminalTab::_RecalculateAndApplyReadOnly` didn't know about whether a
tab should be closable or not, based on the theme settings. Similarly
(though, unreported), the theme update in
`TerminalPage::_updateAllTabCloseButtons` didn't really know about
readonly mode.
This fixes both these issues by moving responsibility for the tab close
button visibility into `TabBase` itself.
Closes#15902
I manually changed the permissions on `HKCU\Console` to deny "Create
subkey" to myself. Then confirmed that it explodes before this change,
and not after this change.
Closes#15458
When marking newly scrolled in rows as invalidated we used:
```
if (offset < 0)
...
else
...
```
But it should've been:
```
if (offset < 0)
...
else if (offset > 0)
...
```
Because now it always set the start of the invalidated rows range to 0.
Additionally, this includes a commented debug helper which I've used
to figure out an unrelated bug. During that search I found this bug.
This is a resurrection of #8588. That PR became painfully stale after
the `ControlCore` split. Original description:
> ## Summary of the Pull Request
> This is a PoC for:
> * Search status in SearchBox (aka number of matches + index of the
current match)
> * Live search (aka search upon typing)
> ## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments
> * Introduced this optionally (global setting to enable it)
> * The approach is following:
> * Every time the filter changes, enumerate all matches
> * Upon navigation just take the relevant match and select it
>
I cleaned it up a bit, and added support for also displaying the
positions of the matches in the scrollbar (if `showMarksOnScrollbar` is
also turned on).
It's also been made SUBSTANTIALLY easier after #15858 was merged.
Similar to before, searching while there's piles of output running isn't
_perfect_. But it's pretty awful currently, so that's not the end of the
world.
Gifs below.
* closes#8631 (which is a bullet point in #3920)
* closes#6319
Co-authored-by: Don-Vito <khvitaly@gmail.com>
---------
Co-authored-by: khvitaly <khvitaly@gmail.com>
`PaintCursor()` is only called when the cursor is visible, but we need
to invalidate the cursor area even if it isn't. Otherwise a transition
from a visible to an invisible cursor wouldn't be rendered.
I'm confident that this closes#15199
## Validation Steps Performed
* Set blink duration extremely high
* Launch pwsh.exe
* Press Enter a few times
* Press Ctrl+L
* There are never 2 cursors visible, not even briefly ✅
Font features require us to skip the fast path via `GetTextComplexity`.
`IDWriteTextLayout` handles it the same way internally.
Closes#15896
## Validation Steps Performed
* Use Cascadia Code
* Set `features: { "ss19": 1 }`
* "0" has a dash in it instead of a dot ✅
This should allow the package to be installed without AppXSvc consulting
the store or the licensing service.
It's free and open-source. It shouldn't need a license to run.
Pattern tree coordinates are viewport-relative.
Closes#15891
## Validation Steps Performed
* Print some text so the viewport scrolls down
* Print a URL
* URL is underlined on hover ✅
This is a small optimization that makes COOKED_READ_DATA erase short
runs of text more quickly. It's not really necessary to do this as
this code is not a hotpath, but I felt like it's neater this way.
It requires no heap allocations even for long runs of text.
## Validation Steps Performed
* Deleting text anywhere in a prompt erases it ✅
This massive refactoring has two goals:
* Enable us to go beyond UCS-2 support for input editing
* Bring clarity into `COOKED_READ_DATA`'s inner workings
Unfortunately, over time, knowledge about its exact operation was lost.
While the new code is still complex it reduces the amount of code by 4x
which will make preserving knowledge hopefully significantly easier.
The new implementation is simpler and slower than the old one in a way,
because every time the input line is modified it's rewritten to the text
buffer from scratch. This however massively simplifies the underlying
algorithm and the amount of state that needs to be tracked and results
in a significant reduction in code size. It also makes it more robust,
because there's less code now that can be incorrect.
This "optimization laziness" can be afforded due the recent >10x
improvements to `TextBuffer`'s text ingestion performance.
For short inputs (<1000 characters) I still expect this implementation
to outperform the conhost from the past.
It has received one optimization already however: While reading text
from the `InputBuffer` we'll now defer writing into the `TextBuffer`
until we've stopped reading. This improves the overhead of pasting text
from O(n^2) to O(n), which is immediately noticeable for inputs >100kB.
Resizing the text buffer still ends up corrupting the input line
however, which unfortunately cannot be fixed in `COOKED_READ_DATA`.
The issue occurs due to bugs in `TextBuffer::Reflow` itself, as it
misplaces the cursor if the prompt is on the last line of the buffer.
Closes#1377Closes#1503Closes#4628Closes#4975Closes#5033Closes#8008
This commit is required to fix#797
## Validation Steps Performed
* ASCII input ✅
* Chinese input (中文維基百科) ❔
* Resizing the window properly wraps/unwraps wide glyphs ❌
Broken due to `TextBuffer::Reflow` bugs
* Surrogate pair input (🙂) ❔
* Resizing the window properly wraps/unwraps surrogate pairs ❌
Broken due to `TextBuffer::Reflow` bugs
* In cmd.exe
* Create 2 file: "a😊b.txt" and "a😟b.txt"
* Press tab: Autocompletes "a😊b.txt" ✅
* Navigate the cursor right past the "a"
* Press tab twice: Autocompletes "a😟b.txt" ✅
* Backspace deletes preceding glyphs ✅
* Ctrl+Backspace deletes preceding words ✅
* Escape clears input ✅
* Home navigates to start ✅
* Ctrl+Home deletes text between cursor and start ✅
* End navigates to end ✅
* Ctrl+End deletes text between cursor and end ✅
* Left navigates over previous code points ✅
* Ctrl+Left navigates to previous word-starts ✅
* Right and F1 navigate over next code points ✅
* Pressing right at the end of input copies characters
from the previous command ✅
* Ctrl+Right navigates to next word-ends ✅
* Insert toggles overwrite mode ✅
* Delete deletes next code point ✅
* Up and F5 cycle through history ✅
* Doesn't crash with no history ✅
* Stops at first entry ✅
* Down cycles through history ✅
* Doesn't crash with no history ✅
* Stops at last entry ✅
* PageUp retrieves the oldest command ✅
* PageDown retrieves the newest command ✅
* F2 starts "copy to char" prompt ✅
* Escape dismisses prompt ✅
* Typing a character copies text from the previous command up
until that character into the current buffer (acts identical
to F3, but with automatic character search) ✅
* F3 copies the previous command into the current buffer,
starting at the current cursor position,
for as many characters as possible ✅
* Doesn't erase trailing text if the current buffer
is longer than the previous command ✅
* Puts the cursor at the end of the copied text ✅
* F4 starts "copy from char" prompt ✅
* Escape dismisses prompt ✅
* Erases text between the current cursor position and the
first instance of a given char (but not including it) ✅
* F6 inserts Ctrl+Z ✅
* F7 without modifiers starts "command list" prompt ✅
* Escape dismisses prompt ✅
* Minimum size of 40x10 characters ✅
* Width expands to fit the widest history command ✅
* Height expands up to 20 rows with longer histories ✅
* F9 starts "command number" prompt ✅
* Left/Right paste replace the buffer with the given command ✅
* And put cursor at the end of the buffer ✅
* Up/Down navigate selection through history ✅
* Stops at start/end with <10 entries ✅
* Stops at start/end with >20 entries ✅
* Wide text rendering during pagination with >20 entries ✅
* Shift+Up/Down moves history items around ✅
* Home navigates to first entry ✅
* End navigates to last entry ✅
* PageUp navigates by 20 items at a time or to first ✅
* PageDown navigates by 20 items at a time or to last ✅
* Alt+F7 clears command history ✅
* F8 cycles through commands that start with the same text as
the current buffer up until the current cursor position ✅
* Doesn't crash with no history ✅
* F9 starts "command number" prompt ✅
* Escape dismisses prompt ✅
* Ignores non-ASCII-decimal characters ✅
* Allows entering between 1 and 5 digits ✅
* Pressing Enter fetches the given command from the history ✅
* Alt+F10 clears doskey aliases ✅
Uses the `RaiseNotificationEvent()` API from UIA automation peers to
announce successful `MovePane` and `MoveTab` actions. The announcements
are localized in the resw file.
Closes#15159
Based on #13575
The ultimate goal of this PR was to use ICU for text search to
* Improve Unicode support
Previously we used `towlower` and only supported BMP glphs.
* Improve search performance (10-100x)
This allows us to search for all results in the entire text buffer
at once without having to do so asynchronously.
Unfortunately, this required some significant changes too:
* ICU's search facilities operate on text positions which we need to be
mapped back to buffer coordinates. This required the introduction of
`CharToColumnMapper` to implement sort of a reverse-`_charOffsets`
mapping. It turns text (character) positions back into coordinates.
* Previously search restarted every time you clicked the search button.
It used the current selection as the starting position for the new
search. But since ICU's `uregex` cannot search backwards we're
required to accumulate all results in a vector first and so we
need to cache that vector in between searches.
* We need to know when the cached vector became invalid and so we have
to track any changes made to `TextBuffer`. The way this commit solves
it is by splitting `GetRowByOffset` into `GetRowByOffset` for
`const ROW` access and `GetMutableRowByOffset` which increments a
mutation counter on each call. The `Search` instance can then compare
its cached mutation count against the previous mutation count.
Finally, this commit makes 2 semi-unrelated changes:
* URL search now also uses ICU, since it's closely related to regular
text search anyways. This significantly improves performance at
large window sizes.
* A few minor issues in `UiaTracing` were fixed. In particular
2 functions which passed strings as `wstring` by copy are now
using `wstring_view` and `TraceLoggingCountedWideString`.
Related to #6319 and #8000
## Validation Steps Performed
* Search upward/downward in conhost ✅
* Search upward/downward in WT ✅
* Searching for any of ß, ẞ, ss or SS matches any of the other ✅
* Searching for any of Σ, σ, or ς matches any of the other ✅
To make this happen, I moved most of `release.yml` into a shared
_pipeline_ template (which is larger than a steps or jobs template).
Most of the diffs are due to that move.
If you compare main:build/pipelines/release.yml against
dev/duhowett/nightly-build:build/pipelines/templates-v2/pipeline-full-release-build.yml,
you will see that the changes are much more minimal than they look.
I also added a parameter to configure how long symbols will be kept. It
defaults to 36530 days (which is the default for the PublishSymbols
task! Yes, 100 years!) but nightly builds will get 15 days.
I originally just wanted to close#1104, but then discovered that hey,
this event wasn't even used anymore. Excerpts of Teams convo:
* [Snap to character grid when resizing window by mcpiroman · Pull
Request #3181 · microsoft/terminal
(github.com)](https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/pull/3181/files#diff-d7ca72e0d5652fee837c06532efa614191bd5c41b18aa4d3ee6711f40138f04c)
added it to Tab.cpp
* where it was added
* which called `pane->Relayout` which I don't even REMEMBER
* By [Add functionality to open the Settings UI tab through openSettings
by leonMSFT · Pull Request #7802 · microsoft/terminal
(github.com)](https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/pull/7802/files#diff-83d260047bed34d3d9d5a12ac62008b65bd6dc5f3b9642905a007c3efce27efd),
there was seemingly no FontSizeChanged in Tab.cpp (when it got moved to
terminaltab.cpp)
> `Pane::Relayout` functionally did nothing because sizing was switched
to `star` sizing at some point in the past, so it was just deleted.
From [Misc pane refactoring by Rosefield · Pull Request #11373 ·
microsoft/terminal](https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/pull/11373/files#r736900998)
So, great. We can kill part of it, and convert the rest to a
`TypedEvent`, and get rid of `DECLARE_` / `DEFINE_`.
`ScrollPositionChangedEventArgs` was ALSO apparently already promoted to
a typed event, so kill that too.
Closes the active checkboxes in #15845. I'll leave that open till we get
to the endgame, I'm sure more will show up.
Closes:
- [x] Accessibility tags all have `CommandPalette_` strings 🤣
- [x] useCommandline should leave the cursor at the _end_ of the input,
not at the start
- [x] useCommandline, when bottom-up, should leave the _last_ list item
selected, not the first.
- [x] ^ Probably applies to any changes to the filter text when bottom
up.
This PR's goal is to allow something like a `Tab` to raise a
ShortcutAction, by saying "this action should be performed on ME". We've
had a whole category of these issues in the past:
* #15734
* #15760
* #13579
* #13942
* #13942
* Heck even dating back to #10832
So, this tries to remove a bit of that footgun. This probably isn't the
_final_ form of what this refactor might look like, but the code is
certainly better than before.
Basically, there's a few bits:
* `ShortcutActionDispatch.DoAction` now takes a `sender`, which can be
_anything_.
* Most actions that use a "Get the focused _thing_ then do something to
it" are changed to "If there was a sender, let's use that - otherwise,
we'll use the focused _thing_".
* TerminalTab was largely refactored to use this, instead of making
requests to the `TerminalPage` to just do a thing to it.
I've got a few TODO!s left, but wanted to get initial feedback.
* [x] `TerminalPage::_HandleTogglePaneZoom`
* [x] `TerminalPage::_HandleFocusPane`
* [x] `TerminalPage::_MoveTab`
Closes#15734
Added --appendCommandLine flag that when set, appends the command to the
preset command in the profile instead of replacing it.
Previously, there was no good way to launch wt while running a command
appended to the set command in the profile. Some uses include profiles
that are set to login or start an application.
Additional comments: Looking for a review, and expecting additional
changes that needs to be done. For example, I am not really sure on how
to include the the option's information in the CallForHelp() screen.
Also, would be great if someone could guide me on including tests for
this new feature. Thanks!
Closes#5528
---------
Co-authored-by: Charles Liu <hliu729@outlook.com>
Obviously, icons are all wrong. Color is about right but they need CAN
icons.
I'll leave that as an exercise for @DHowett to generate the right ones
as a follow-up.
Related to #774
Some folks over in MSAL land told us that client IDs don't need to be
kept secret.
This reduces the delta between "public" terminal and "release build"
terminal by one more file, leaving only the telemetry header left (which
won't be going public for obvious reasons).
This will also make it easier for contributors to test out Azure Cloud
Shell changes... and testing out VT without ConPTY interfering[^1].
[^1]: When Dev branding is selected, Azure Cloud Shell has the added
perk of being wired directly to TerminalCore rather than going through
ConPTY.
Switch the schema depending on the branding we're being built for
Ever since we started writing the entire settings file out ourselves,
we've had the opportunity to control which schema it uses.
This is a quality-of-life improvement for Preview users, and might make
life easier for Dev users as well.
For Debug builds, it even switches over to a local `file://` path to
the schema in the source directory!
Closes#6601
Add test for subparameter based `GraphicOptions`.
`GraphicsSingleWithSubParamTests` is added for subparameter based
`GraphicOptions`. This should've been included with #15729.
Also, while working on #15795, I realized creating and passing
subparameters for the tests is painful right now. I've added a small
util `MakeSubParamsAndRanges(...)` that eases creating subparameters and
subparameter ranges from a simple list of (lists of) subparameters.
## Validation Steps Performed
- All tests passed.
The OneBranch build system relies on the *build container host* being
able to publish all artifacts all at once. Therefore, our build steps
must not publish any artifacts.
I made it configurable so that the impact on existing pipelines was
minimal.
For every job that produces artifacts and is part of the release
pipeline, I am now exposing two variables that we can pass to OneBranch
so that it can locate and name artifacts:
- `JobOutputDirectory`, the output folder for the entire job
- `JobOutputArtifactName`, the name of the artifact produced by the job
I have also added a `variables` parameter to every job, so consuming
pipelines can override or insert their own variables.
#### Fix warnings due to formatting during a clean build
Seems like the compiler cares about them more than our formatter.
Possibly introduced in https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/pull/15062
## Validation Steps Performed
- Tests passed
I put them in that package like 40 years ago to get them into the build
system faster. They actually belong here.
I made them based on SVGs the Azure Cloud Shell team shared with us.
I have been working feverishly to remove the use of undefined macros used in sources\dirs files (such as this one SDKTOOLS_INC_PATH) that our telemetry constantly catches and reports as an issue.
Related work items: MSFT-40126326
Retrieved from https://microsoft.visualstudio.com os.2020 OS official/rs_we_adept_e4d2 8589e01e23c4ec64ad270dbf0c1beb8a78b5a833
A customer reports that `wil::get_token_information` and its use of `wistd::unique_ptr<T>` is hitting a code analysis error in that dynamically-sized token information blocks are allocated with `operator new` but deleted with `delete T*`. This is a "mismatched allocator" error and should be removed.
## What changed?
The output type of token information changed from `wistd::unique_ptr<T>` to `wil::unique_tokeninfo_ptr<T>` which has a custom deleter that uses `operator delete(p)` to match the allocator.
As the new type is incompatible with the old type, all call sites for `wil::GetTokenInformation` were updated to use the new type.
## How was the change tested?
1. Ran the WIL unit tests
2. Prime build of impacted directories
Related: https://github.com/microsoft/wil/pull/306
Related: https://github.com/microsoft/wil/issues/276
Retrieved from https://microsoft.visualstudio.com os.2020 OS official/rs_we_adept_e4d2 d86d562b7559c2ca8de036085de6e52e80da8c93
I have been working feverishly to remove the use of undefined macros used in
sources\dirs files (such as this one ONECORE_PRIV_SDK_INC_PATH) that our
telemetry constantly catches and reports as an issue.
Retrieved from https://microsoft.visualstudio.com os.2020 OS official/rs_we_adept_e4d2 bb08e422cfb4dc2f8b99a2c34bac67a61654a572
Related work items: MSFT-40126326
"Leak in font object 1952 times in last 2k GDI objects created, that lead console to run out of GDI objects."
Fixes MSFT-42906562
Retrieved from https://microsoft.visualstudio.com os.2020 OS official/rs_we_adept_e4d2 44f47bf7dbe4bff1986ba5fd8940b56f854c58b7
In the most recent compiler ingestion into Windows ("LKG14"), we found
that this particular construction--checking an optional for a value
during this range-for loop--resulted in bad code generation.
When optimized, it generates code that looks effectively like this:
```c++
if (!newRowWidth.has_value()) {
while (true) {
// do the row stuff...
++it;
}
}
```
The loop never exits, and `_RefreshRowIDs` walks off the end of the
buffer. Whoops.
This commit fixes that issue by tricking the optimizer to go another
way. Leonard tells me it's harmless to call `Resize` a bunch of times,
even if it's a no-op, so I trust that this change results in the right
outcome with none of the crashing.
Fixes MSFT-41456525
Retrieved from https://microsoft.visualstudio.com os.2020 OS official/rs_we_adept_e4d2 c2b3697c867bddf5660da8b222e99ff4bfd1ea5b
Arm64EC does not support AVX and the usage of it in EC compilation is now an error with the LKG14 compiler update. The fix is to conditionalize using AVX for non-EC compilation.
Related work items: MSFT-42045281
Retrieved from https://microsoft.visualstudio.com os.2020 OS official/rs_we_adept_e4d2 31ca1e08e001988b95ff29a5e098441cae0363bd
By default the command suggestion will generate a file named based on your commit. That's generally ok as long as you add the file to your commit. Someone can reorganize it later.
:warning: The command is written for posix shells. If it doesn't work for you, you can manually _add_ (one word per line) / _remove_ items to `expect.txt` and the `excludes.txt` files.
If the listed items are:
* ... **misspelled**, then please *correct* them instead of using the command.
@@ -36,7 +34,9 @@ https://www.regexplanet.com/advanced/perl/) yours before committing to verify it
* well-formed pattern.
If you can write a [pattern](https://github.com/check-spelling/check-spelling/wiki/Configuration-Examples:-patterns) that would match it,
# 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 )
# 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 )
@@ -14,7 +14,7 @@ The point of doing all this work in public is to ensure that we are holding ours
The team triages new issues several times a week. During triage, the team uses labels to categorize, manage, and drive the project workflow.
We employ [a bot engine](https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/blob/main/doc/bot.md) to help us automate common processes within our workflow.
We employ [a bot engine](./doc/bot.md) to help us automate common processes within our workflow.
We drive the bot by tagging issues with specific labels which cause the bot engine to close issues, merge branches, etc. This bot engine helps us keep the repo clean by automating the process of notifying appropriate parties if/when information/follow-up is needed, and closing stale issues/PRs after reminders have remained unanswered for several days.
> * You may need to install the [VC++ v14 Desktop Framework Package](https://docs.microsoft.com/troubleshoot/cpp/c-runtime-packages-desktop-bridge#how-to-install-and-update-desktop-framework-packages).
@@ -72,8 +72,8 @@ package:
wingetinstall--idMicrosoft.WindowsTerminal-e
```
> **Note**\
> Due to a dependency issue, Terminal's current versions cannot be installed via the Windows Package Manager CLI. To install the stable release 1.17 or later, or the Preview release 1.18 or later, please use an alternative installation method.
> [!NOTE]
> Dependency support is available in WinGet version [1.6.2631 or later](https://github.com/microsoft/winget-cli/releases). To install the Terminal stable release 1.18 or later, please make sure you have the updated version of the WinGet client.
#### Via Chocolatey (unofficial)
@@ -118,9 +118,31 @@ repository.
---
## Installing Windows Terminal Canary
Windows Terminal Canary is a nightly build of Windows Terminal. This build has the latest code from our `main` branch, giving you an opportunity to try features before they make it to Windows Terminal Preview.
Windows Terminal Canary is our least stable offering, so you may discover bugs before we have had a chance to find them.
Windows Terminal Canary is available as an App Installer distribution and a Portable ZIP distribution.
The App Installer distribution supports automatic updates. Due to platform limitations, this installer only works on Windows 11.
The Portable ZIP distribution is a portable application. It will not automatically update and will not automatically check for updates. This portable ZIP distribution works on Windows 10 (19041+) and Windows 11.
`.../console/published/wincon.w` in the OS repo when you submit the PR.
The branch won't build without it.
* For now, you can update winconp.h with your consumable changes.
* Define registry name (ex `CONSOLE_REGISTRY_CURSORCOLOR`)
* Add the setting to `CONSOLE_STATE_INFO`
* Define registry name (ex:`CONSOLE_REGISTRY_CURSORCOLOR`)
* Add the setting to `CONSOLE_STATE_INFO`.
* Define the property key ID and the property key itself.
- Yes, the large majority of the `DEFINE_PROPERTYKEY` defs are the same, it's only the last byte of the guid that changes
- Yes, the large majority of the `DEFINE_PROPERTYKEY` defs are the same, it's only the last byte of the guid that changes.
2. Add matching fields to Settings.hpp
- Add getters, setters, the whole drill.
@@ -17,9 +17,9 @@
- We need to add it to *reading and writing* the registry from the propsheet, and *reading* the link from the propsheet. Yes, that's weird, but the propsheet is smart enough to re-use ShortcutSerialization::s_SetLinkValues, but not smart enough to do the same with RegistrySerialization.
-`src/propsheet/registry.cpp`
-`propsheet/registry.cpp@InitRegistryValues` should initialize the default value for the property.
-`propsheet/registry.cpp@GetRegistryValues` should make sure to read the property from the registry
-`propsheet/registry.cpp@GetRegistryValues` should make sure to read the property from the registry.
4. Add the field to the propslib registry map
4. Add the field to the propslib registry map.
5. Add the value to `ShortcutSerialization.cpp`
- Read the value in `ShortcutSerialization::s_PopulateV2Properties`
@@ -30,11 +30,11 @@ Now, your new setting should be stored just like all the other properties.
7. Update the feature test properties to get add the setting as well
-`ft_uia/Common/NativeMethods.cs@WinConP`:
-`Wtypes.PROPERTYKEY PKEY_Console_`
-`NT_CONSOLE_PROPS`
-`Wtypes.PROPERTYKEY PKEY_Console_`.
-`NT_CONSOLE_PROPS`.
8. Add the default value for the setting to `win32k-settings.man`
- If the setting shouldn't default to 0 or `nullptr`, then you'll need to set the default value of the setting in `win32k-settings.man`.
9. Update `Settings::InitFromStateInfo` and `Settings::CreateConsoleStateInfo` to get/set the value in a CONSOLE_STATE_INFO appropriately
9. Update `Settings::InitFromStateInfo` and `Settings::CreateConsoleStateInfo` to get/set the value in a CONSOLE_STATE_INFO appropriately.
@@ -27,6 +27,8 @@ I would highly recommend that Gulp convert to using PowerShell scripts and that
Original Source: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/issues/217#issuecomment-404240443
_Addendum_: cmd.exe is the literal embodiment of [xkcd#1172]([url](https://xkcd.com/1172/)). Every change, no matter how small, will break _someone_.
## <a name="screenPerf"></a>Why is typing-to-screen performance better than every other app?
I really do not mind when someone comes by and decides to tell us that we're doing a good job at something. We hear so many complaints every day that a post like this is a breath of fresh air. Thanks for your thanks!
@@ -49,7 +51,7 @@ Will this UI enhancement come to other apps on Windows? Almost certainly not. Th
Will we try to keep it from regressing? Yes! Right now it's sort of a manual process. We identify that something is getting slow and then we go haul out [WPR](https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows-hardware/test/wpt/windows-performance-recorder) and start taking traces. We stare down the hot paths and try to reason out what is going on and then improve them. For instance, in the last cycle or two, we focused on heap allocations as a major area where we could improve our end-to-end performance, changing a ton of our code to use stack-constructed iterator-like facades over the underlying request buffer instead of translating and allocating it into a new heap space for each level of processing.
As an aside, @bitcrazed wants us to automate performance tests in some conhost specific way, but I haven't quite figured out a controlled environment to do this in yet. The Windows Engineering System runs performance tests each night that give us a coarsegrained way of knowing if we messed something up for the whole operating system, and they technically offer a finegrained way for us to insert our own performance tests... but I just haven't got around to that yet. If you have an idea for a way for us to do this in an automated fashion, I'm all ears.
As an aside, @bitcrazed wants us to automate performance tests in some conhost specific way, but I haven't quite figured out a controlled environment to do this in yet. The Windows Engineering System runs performance tests each night that give us a coarse-grained way of knowing if we messed something up for the whole operating system, and they technically offer a fine-grained way for us to insert our own performance tests... but I just haven't got around to that yet. If you have an idea for a way for us to do this in an automated fashion, I'm all ears.
If there's anything else you'd like to know, let me know. I could go on all day. I deleted like 15 tangents from this reply before posting it....
*`/src/cascadia/TerminalApp` - This DLL represents the implementation of the Windows Terminal application. This includes parsing settings, hosting tabs & panes with Terminals in them, and displaying other UI elements. This DLL is almost entirely UWP-like code, and shouldn't be doing any Win32-like UI work.
*`/src/cascadia/WindowsTerminal` - This EXE provides Win32 hosting for the TerminalApp. It will set up XAML islands, and is responsible for drawing the window, either as a standard window or with content in the titlebar (non-client area).
*`/src/cascadia/CascadiaPackage` - This is a project for packaging the Windows Terminal and its dependencies into an .appx/.msix for deploying to the machine.
*`/src/cascadia/PublicTerminalCore` - This is a DLL wrapper for the TerminalCore and Renderer, similar to `TermControl`, which exposes some exported functions that so the Terminal can be used from C#.
*`/src/cascadia/WpfTerminalControl` - A DLL implementing a WPF version of the Terminal Control.
*`/src/host`– The meat of the windows console host. This includes buffer, input, output, windowing, server management, clipboard, and most interactions with the console host window that aren’t stated anywhere else. We’re trying to pull things out that are reusable into other libraries, but it’s a work in progress
*`/src/host/lib`– Builds the reusable LIB copy of the host
@@ -126,8 +125,6 @@
* Private calls into the Windows Window Manager to perform privileged actions related to the console process (working to eliminate) or for High DPI stuff (also working to eliminate)
*`Userprivapi.cpp`
*`Windowdpiapi.cpp`
* New UTF8 state machine in progress to improve Bash (and other apps) support for UTF-8 in console
*`Utf8ToWideCharParser.cpp`
* Window resizing/layout/management/window messaging loops and all that other stuff that has us interact with Windows to create a visual display surface and control the user interaction entry point
"description":"Use to set a path to a pixel shader to use with the Terminal when unfocused. Overrides `experimental.retroTerminalEffect`. This is an experimental feature, and its continued existence is not guaranteed.",
"type":"string"
},
"useAcrylic":{
"description":"When set to true, the window will have an acrylic material background when unfocused. When set to false, the window will have a plain, untextured background when unfocused.",
"type":"boolean"
},
"opacity":{
"default":100,
"description":"Sets the opacity of the window for the profile when unfocused. Accepts values from 0-100.",
"maximum":100,
"minimum":0,
"type":"number"
}
},
"type":"object"
@@ -374,8 +390,12 @@
},
"ShortcutActionName":{
"enum":[
"addMark",
"adjustFontSize",
"adjustOpacity",
"clearAllMarks",
"clearBuffer",
"clearMark",
"closeOtherPanes",
"closeOtherTabs",
"closePane",
@@ -386,6 +406,7 @@
"copy",
"duplicateTab",
"expandSelectionToWord",
"experimental.colorSelection",
"exportBuffer",
"find",
"findMatch",
@@ -393,64 +414,60 @@
"globalSummon",
"identifyWindow",
"identifyWindows",
"markMode",
"moveFocus",
"movePane",
"swapPane",
"markMode",
"moveTab",
"multipleActions",
"newTab",
"newWindow",
"nextTab",
"openAbout",
"openNewTabDropdown",
"openSettings",
"openSystemMenu",
"openTabColorPicker",
"openTabRenamer",
"openWindowRenamer",
"paste",
"prevTab",
"renameTab",
"openSystemMenu",
"openTabRenamer",
"quakeMode",
"quit",
"renameTab",
"renameWindow",
"resetFontSize",
"resizePane",
"renameWindow",
"restoreLastClosed",
"scrollDown",
"scrollDownPage",
"scrollToBottom",
"scrollToMark",
"scrollToTop",
"scrollUp",
"scrollUpPage",
"scrollToBottom",
"scrollToTop",
"searchWeb",
"selectAll",
"sendInput",
"setColorScheme",
"setFocusMode",
"setFullScreen",
"setMaximized",
"setTabColor",
"showSuggestions",
"splitPane",
"swapPane",
"switchSelectionEndpoint",
"switchToTab",
"tabSearch",
"toggleAlwaysOnTop",
"toggleBlockSelection",
"toggleFocusMode",
"selectAll",
"setFocusMode",
"switchSelectionEndpoint",
"toggleFullscreen",
"setFullScreen",
"setMaximized",
"togglePaneZoom",
"toggleSplitOrientation",
"toggleReadOnlyMode",
"toggleShaderEffects",
"toggleSplitOrientation",
"wt",
"quit",
"adjustOpacity",
"restoreLastClosed",
"addMark",
"scrollToMark",
"clearMark",
"clearAllMarks",
"searchWeb",
"experimental.colorSelection",
"unbound"
],
"type":"string"
@@ -640,6 +657,7 @@
"$ref":"#/$defs/NewTabMenuEntry"
},
{
"type":"object",
"properties":{
"type":{
"type":"string",
@@ -668,7 +686,7 @@
},
"allowEmpty":{
"description":"Whether to render a folder without entries, or to hide it",
"default":"false",
"default":false,
"type":"boolean"
}
}
@@ -682,6 +700,7 @@
"$ref":"#/$defs/NewTabMenuEntry"
},
{
"type":"object",
"properties":{
"type":{
"type":"string",
@@ -698,6 +717,7 @@
"$ref":"#/$defs/NewTabMenuEntry"
},
{
"type":"object",
"properties":{
"type":{
"type":"string",
@@ -719,6 +739,7 @@
"$ref":"#/$defs/NewTabMenuEntry"
},
{
"type":"object",
"properties":{
"type":{
"type":"string",
@@ -735,6 +756,7 @@
"$ref":"#/$defs/NewTabMenuEntry"
},
{
"type":"object",
"properties":{
"type":{
"type":"string",
@@ -775,6 +797,7 @@
]
},
"ShortcutAction":{
"type":"object",
"properties":{
"action":{
"description":"The action to execute",
@@ -783,8 +806,7 @@
},
"required":[
"action"
],
"type":"object"
]
},
"AdjustFontSizeAction":{
"description":"Arguments corresponding to an Adjust Font Size Action",
@@ -793,6 +815,7 @@
"$ref":"#/$defs/ShortcutAction"
},
{
"type":"object",
"properties":{
"action":{
"type":"string",
@@ -817,6 +840,7 @@
"$ref":"#/$defs/ShortcutAction"
},
{
"type":"object",
"properties":{
"action":{
"type":"string",
@@ -858,6 +882,7 @@
"$ref":"#/$defs/NewTerminalArgs"
},
{
"type":"object",
"properties":{
"action":{
"type":"string",
@@ -874,6 +899,7 @@
"$ref":"#/$defs/ShortcutAction"
},
{
"type":"object",
"properties":{
"action":{
"type":"string",
@@ -898,6 +924,7 @@
"$ref":"#/$defs/ShortcutAction"
},
{
"type":"object",
"properties":{
"action":{
"type":"string",
@@ -922,6 +949,7 @@
"$ref":"#/$defs/ShortcutAction"
},
{
"type":"object",
"properties":{
"action":{
"type":"string",
@@ -946,6 +974,7 @@
"$ref":"#/$defs/ShortcutAction"
},
{
"type":"object",
"properties":{
"action":{
"type":"string",
@@ -970,6 +999,7 @@
"$ref":"#/$defs/ShortcutAction"
},
{
"type":"object",
"properties":{
"action":{
"type":"string",
@@ -994,6 +1024,7 @@
"$ref":"#/$defs/ShortcutAction"
},
{
"type":"object",
"properties":{
"action":{
"type":"string",
@@ -1018,6 +1049,7 @@
"$ref":"#/$defs/ShortcutAction"
},
{
"type":"object",
"properties":{
"action":{
"type":"string",
@@ -1045,6 +1077,7 @@
"$ref":"#/$defs/NewTerminalArgs"
},
{
"type":"object",
"properties":{
"action":{
"type":"string",
@@ -1077,6 +1110,7 @@
"$ref":"#/$defs/ShortcutAction"
},
{
"type":"object",
"properties":{
"action":{
"type":"string",
@@ -1114,6 +1148,7 @@
"$ref":"#/$defs/ShortcutAction"
},
{
"type":"object",
"properties":{
"action":{
"type":"string",
@@ -1141,6 +1176,7 @@
"$ref":"#/$defs/ShortcutAction"
},
{
"type":"object",
"properties":{
"action":{
"type":"string",
@@ -1162,6 +1198,7 @@
"$ref":"#/$defs/ShortcutAction"
},
{
"type":"object",
"properties":{
"action":{
"type":"string",
@@ -1183,6 +1220,7 @@
"$ref":"#/$defs/ShortcutAction"
},
{
"type":"object",
"properties":{
"action":{
"type":"string",
@@ -1207,6 +1245,7 @@
"$ref":"#/$defs/ShortcutAction"
},
{
"type":"object",
"properties":{
"action":{
"type":"string",
@@ -1227,6 +1266,7 @@
"$ref":"#/$defs/ShortcutAction"
},
{
"type":"object",
"properties":{
"action":{
"type":"string",
@@ -1247,6 +1287,7 @@
"$ref":"#/$defs/ShortcutAction"
},
{
"type":"object",
"properties":{
"action":{
"type":"string",
@@ -1267,6 +1308,7 @@
"$ref":"#/$defs/ShortcutAction"
},
{
"type":"object",
"properties":{
"action":{
"type":"string",
@@ -1291,6 +1333,7 @@
"$ref":"#/$defs/ShortcutAction"
},
{
"type":"object",
"properties":{
"action":{
"type":"string",
@@ -1319,6 +1362,7 @@
"$ref":"#/$defs/ShortcutAction"
},
{
"type":"object",
"properties":{
"action":{
"type":"string",
@@ -1347,6 +1391,7 @@
"$ref":"#/$defs/ShortcutAction"
},
{
"type":"object",
"properties":{
"action":{
"type":"string",
@@ -1375,6 +1420,7 @@
"$ref":"#/$defs/ShortcutAction"
},
{
"type":"object",
"properties":{
"action":{
"type":"string",
@@ -1399,6 +1445,7 @@
"$ref":"#/$defs/ShortcutAction"
},
{
"type":"object",
"properties":{
"action":{
"type":"string",
@@ -1423,6 +1470,7 @@
"$ref":"#/$defs/ShortcutAction"
},
{
"type":"object",
"properties":{
"action":{
"type":"string",
@@ -1446,6 +1494,7 @@
"$ref":"#/$defs/ShortcutAction"
},
{
"type":"object",
"properties":{
"action":{
"type":"string",
@@ -1471,6 +1520,7 @@
"$ref":"#/$defs/ShortcutAction"
},
{
"type":"object",
"properties":{
"action":{
"type":"string",
@@ -1492,6 +1542,7 @@
"$ref":"#/$defs/ShortcutAction"
},
{
"type":"object",
"properties":{
"action":{
"type":"string",
@@ -1519,6 +1570,7 @@
"$ref":"#/$defs/NewTerminalArgs"
},
{
"type":"object",
"properties":{
"action":{
"type":"string",
@@ -1535,6 +1587,7 @@
"$ref":"#/$defs/ShortcutAction"
},
{
"type":"object",
"properties":{
"action":{
"type":"string",
@@ -1556,6 +1609,7 @@
"$ref":"#/$defs/ShortcutAction"
},
{
"type":"object",
"properties":{
"action":{
"type":"string",
@@ -1577,6 +1631,7 @@
"$ref":"#/$defs/ShortcutAction"
},
{
"type":"object",
"properties":{
"action":{
"type":"string",
@@ -1598,6 +1653,7 @@
"$ref":"#/$defs/ShortcutAction"
},
{
"type":"object",
"properties":{
"action":{
"type":"string",
@@ -1619,6 +1675,7 @@
"$ref":"#/$defs/ShortcutAction"
},
{
"type":"object",
"properties":{
"action":{
"type":"string",
@@ -1641,6 +1698,7 @@
"$ref":"#/$defs/ShortcutAction"
},
{
"type":"object",
"properties":{
"action":{
"type":"string",
@@ -1662,6 +1720,7 @@
"$ref":"#/$defs/ShortcutAction"
},
{
"type":"object",
"properties":{
"action":{
"type":"string",
@@ -1683,6 +1742,7 @@
"$ref":"#/$defs/ShortcutAction"
},
{
"type":"object",
"properties":{
"action":{
"type":"string",
@@ -1734,6 +1794,7 @@
"$ref":"#/$defs/ShortcutAction"
},
{
"type":"object",
"properties":{
"action":{
"type":"string",
@@ -1750,6 +1811,7 @@
"$ref":"#/$defs/ShortcutAction"
},
{
"type":"object",
"properties":{
"action":{
"type":"string",
@@ -1773,6 +1835,7 @@
"$ref":"#/$defs/ShortcutAction"
},
{
"type":"object",
"properties":{
"action":{
"type":"string",
@@ -1801,6 +1864,7 @@
"$ref":"#/$defs/ShortcutAction"
},
{
"type":"object",
"properties":{
"action":{
"type":"string",
@@ -1887,7 +1951,11 @@
"properties":{
"applicationTheme":{
"description":"Which UI theme the Terminal should use for controls",
"enum":["light","dark","system"],
"enum":[
"light",
"dark",
"system"
],
"type":"string"
},
"useMica":{
@@ -1918,7 +1986,11 @@
"type":"string",
"description":"The name of the theme. This will be displayed in the settings UI.",
"not":{
"enum":["light","dark","system"]
"enum":[
"light",
"dark",
"system"
]
}
},
"tab":{
@@ -1935,6 +2007,7 @@
"ThemePair":{
"additionalProperties":false,
"description":"A pair of Theme names, to allow the Terminal to switch theme based on the OS theme",
"type":"object",
"properties":{
"light":{
"type":"string",
@@ -2116,16 +2189,16 @@
},
"name":{
"description":"The name that will appear in the command palette. If one isn't provided, the terminal will attempt to automatically generate a name.\nIf name is a string, it will be the name of the command.\nIf name is a object, the key property of the object will be used to lookup a localized string resource for the command",
"properties":{
"key":{
"type":"string"
}
},
"type":[
"string",
"object",
"null"
]
],
"properties":{
"key":{
"type":"string"
}
}
},
"iterateOn":{
"type":"string",
@@ -2162,6 +2235,7 @@
"Globals":{
"additionalProperties":true,
"description":"Properties that affect the entire window, regardless of the profile settings.",
"type":"object",
"properties":{
"alwaysOnTop":{
"default":false,
@@ -2173,6 +2247,11 @@
"description":"When set to true, tabs are always displayed. When set to false and \"showTabsInTitlebar\" is set to false, tabs only appear after opening a new tab.",
"type":"boolean"
},
"compatibility.enableUnfocusedAcrylic":{
"default":true,
"description":"When set to true, unfocused windows can have acrylic instead of opaque.",
"type":"boolean"
},
"centerOnLaunch":{
"default":false,
"description":"When set to `true`, the terminal window will auto-center itself on the display it opens on. The terminal will use the \"initialPosition\" to determine which display to open on.",
@@ -2270,11 +2349,6 @@
"description":"When set to true, the background image for the currently focused profile is expanded to encompass the entire window, beneath other panes.",
"type":"boolean"
},
"compatibility.reloadEnvironmentVariables":{
"default":true,
"description":"When set to true, when opening a new tab or pane it will get reloaded environment variables.",
"type":"boolean"
},
"initialCols":{
"default":120,
"description":"The number of columns displayed in the window upon first load. If \"launchMode\" is set to \"maximized\" (or \"maximizedFocus\"), this property is ignored.",
@@ -2376,10 +2450,17 @@
"theme":{
"default":"dark",
"description":"Sets the theme of the application. This value should be the name of one of the themes defined in `themes`. The Terminal also includes the themes `dark`, `light`, and `system`.",
"oneOf":[
"anyOf":[
{
"type":"string"
},
{
"enum":[
"dark",
"light",
"system"
]
},
{
"$ref":"#/$defs/ThemePair"
}
@@ -2489,12 +2570,12 @@
},
"required":[
"defaultProfile"
],
"type":"object"
]
},
"Profile":{
"description":"Properties specific to a unique profile.",
"additionalProperties":false,
"type":"object",
"properties":{
"acrylicOpacity":{
"default":0.5,
@@ -2523,6 +2604,11 @@
"null"
]
},
"compatibility.reloadEnvironmentVariables":{
"default":true,
"description":"When set to true, when opening a new tab or pane it will get reloaded environment variables.",
"type":"boolean"
},
"unfocusedAppearance":{
"$ref":"#/$defs/AppearanceConfig",
"description":"Sets the appearance of the terminal when it is unfocused.",
@@ -2541,7 +2627,7 @@
},
"backgroundImage":{
"description":"Sets the file location of the image to draw over the window background.",
"oneOf":[
"anyOf":[
{
"type":[
"string",
@@ -2553,10 +2639,6 @@
"desktopWallpaper"
]
}
],
"type":[
"string",
"null"
]
},
"backgroundImageAlignment":{
@@ -2893,8 +2975,7 @@
"description":"When set to true, the window will have an acrylic material background. When set to false, the window will have a plain, untextured background.",
"type":"boolean"
}
},
"type":"object"
}
},
"ProfileList":{
"description":"A list of profiles and the properties specific to each.",
@@ -2909,6 +2990,7 @@
},
"ProfilesObject":{
"description":"A list of profiles and default settings that apply to all of them",
"type":"object",
"properties":{
"list":{
"$ref":"#/$defs/ProfileList"
@@ -2917,12 +2999,12 @@
"description":"The default settings that apply to every profile.",
"$ref":"#/$defs/Profile"
}
},
"type":"object"
}
},
"SchemeList":{
"description":"Properties are specific to each color scheme. ColorTool is a great tool you can use to create and explore new color schemes. All colors use hex color format.",
"items":{
"type":"object",
"additionalProperties":false,
"properties":{
"name":{
@@ -3011,8 +3093,7 @@
"$ref":"#/$defs/Color",
"description":"Sets the color used as ANSI yellow."
> This document has been superseded by the [Terminal 2023 Roadmap]. Please refer to that document for the updated roadmap.
## Overview
This document outlines the roadmap of features we're planning for the Windows Terminal during 2022. This serves as a successor to the [Terminal v2 Roadmap], to reflect changes to our planning going forward.
@@ -111,7 +115,7 @@ Incoming issues/asks/etc. are triaged several times a week, labeled appropriatel
This document outlines the roadmap of features we're planning for the Windows Terminal during 2023. This serves as a successor to the [2022 Roadmap], to reflect changes to our planning going forward.
## Release cadence
We've settled on a roughly quarterly release cycle - about once every three months. In May we released [Terminal 1.18]. We're targeting 1.19 for sometime in late September, and 1.20 likely in early January 2024. (These timelines are rough estimates, not strict rules. For example, 1.18's release was pushed back slightly to better align with Build 2023.)
New features will go into [Windows Terminal Preview](https://aka.ms/terminal-preview) first. Typically, one release after they've been in Preview, those features will move into [Windows Terminal](https://aka.ms/terminal) ("Terminal Stable"). In the case of some more risky or experimental features, we might hold them to only Preview builds for an extended period[^1].
| Quarter | Date | Release Version | Preview Release Blog Post |
Within a single milestone, we typically reserve the last month as "bake time", to polish off bugfixes and get the release ready to ship. In this last month, we'll likely slow down our ingestion of community PRs just to stabilize what's already in `main`. For example, a given release might look like:
```mermaid
gantt
title Proposed Terminal Releases 1.14-1.18
dateFormat YYYY-MM-DD
axisFormat %d %b
section Terminal 1.18
Lock down & bake :l18, 2023-05-09 , 2w
Release 1.18 :milestone, 2023-05-23, 0
1.18 becomes Stable :milestone, after l19, 0
section Terminal 1.19
Features :f19, after l18, 10w
Bugfix :b19, after f19 , 4w
Lock down & bake :l19, after b19 , 2w
Release 1.19 :milestone, after l19, 0
```
_informative, not normative_
## Up next in the Terminal
### Terminal 1.19
* Canary builds. Nightly builds of the Terminal from `main`. More unstable, but quicker access to experimental features.
* Terminal AI. While this will only be shipping in Canary builds to begin with, the v0 implementation will be available roughly at the same time as 1.19.
* The Suggestions UI. This is the starting point for shell completions [#3121], tasks [#1595], and probably Terminal AI at some point too.
* Unicode input for `cmd.exe` (and any other console app using "cooked reads"). See [#15567]
* Miscellaneous performance improvements. Conhost should be a _lot_ faster now.
* Broadcast input mode, for sending text to multiple panes at once.
## Team member "north stars"
For a more fluid take on what each of the team's personal goals are, head on over to [Core team North Stars]. This has a list of more long-term goals that each team member is working towards, but not things that are necessarily committed work.
[^1]: A conclusive list of these features can be found at [../src/features.xml](../src/features.xml). Note that this is a raw XML doc used to light up specific parts of the codebase, and not something authored for human consumption.
* Give me suggestions from my recent commands, using what I've typed
* Give me suggestions of directories I've recently been in
* _(After [Tasks] are implemented)_ Give me suggestions from recent commands,
commands I've saved, and commands for this project. Don't nest any, so they're
all in the top-level menu. Use what I've typed already to start filtering.
* Just open the Suggestions UI with all suggestions sources, and group them by
the source of the suggestions.
This should cover most of the basic use cases for suggestions.
#### Who owns this menu?
There was some discussion of who should own the suggestions menu. The control
itself? Or the app hosting the control?
A main argument for hosting this UI in the control itself is that any consumer
of the `TermControl` should be able to display the [shell-driven autocompletion]
menu. And they should get the UI from us "for free". Consumers shouldn't need to
reimplement it themselves. This probably could be done without many changes:
* Instead of operating on `Command`s and actions from the terminal settings,
the control could just know that all the entries in the menu are "send
input" "actions".
* The control could offer a method to manually invoke the Suggestions UI for a
list of {suggestion, name, description} objects.
* The app layer could easily translate between sendInput actions and these
pseudo-actions.
A big argument in favor of having the app layer host the control: Consider an
app like Visual Studio. When they embed the control, they'll want to style the
shell-completions UI in their own way. They already have their own intellisense
menu, and their own UI paradigm.
For now, we'll leave this as something that's owned by the app layer. When we
get around to finalizing the [shell-driven autocompletion] design, we can
iterate on ideas for supporting both consumers that want to use a pre-built
suggestions control, or consumers who want to bring their own.
## Tenets
<table>
<tr><td><strong>Compatibility</strong></td><td>
This shouldn't break any existing flows. This is a general purpose UI element,
to be extended in a variety of ways. Those customizations will all be opt-in by
the user, so I'm not expecting any breaking compatibility changes here.
</td></tr>
<tr><td><strong>Accessibility</strong></td><td>
The Suggestions UI was designed with the goal of making commandline shell
suggestions _more_ accessible. As Carlos previously wrote:
> Screen readers struggle with this because the entire menu is redrawn every time, making it harder to understand what exactly is "selected" (as the concept of selection in this instance is a shell-side concept represented by visual manipulation).
>
> ...
>
> _\[Shell driven suggestions\]_ can then be leveraged by Windows Terminal to create UI elements. Doing so leverages WinUI's accessible design.
This will allow the Terminal to provide more context-relevant information to
screen readers.
</td></tr>
<tr><td><strong>Sustainability</strong></td><td>
No sustainability changes expected.
</td></tr>
<tr><td><strong>Localization</strong></td><td>
The localization needs of the Suggestions UI will be effectively the same as the
needs of the Command Palette.
The Terminal will have no way to localize suggestions that are provided via
[shell-driven autocompletion]. These are just verbatim strings that the shell
told us to use. We don't consider this to be something to worry about, however.
This is no different than the fact that Terminal cannot localize the `Get-Help`
(or any other) output of PowerShell.
</td></tr>
</table>
## Implementation Plan
This is more of an informative outline, rather than a normative one. Many of the
things from Crawl, Walk, and Run are all already in PRs as of the time of this
spec's review.
### 🐣 Crawl
* [ ] Fork the Command palette to a new UI element, the `SuggestionsControl`
* [ ] Enable previewing `sendInput` actions in the Command Palette and `SuggestionsControl`
* [ ] Enable the `SuggestionsControl` to open top-down (aligned to the bottom of the cursor row) or bottom-up (aligned to the top of the cursor row).
* [ ] Disable sorting on the `SuggestionsControl` - elements should presumably be pre-sorted by the source.
* [ ] Expose the recent commands as a accessor on `TermControl`
* [ ] Add a `suggestions` action which accepts a single option `recentCommands`. These should be fed in MRU order to the `SuggestionsControl`.
* [ ] Expose the recent directories as an accessor on `TermControl`, and add a `recentDirectories` source.
### 🚶 Walk
* [ ] Add a `tasks` source to `suggestions` which opens the Suggestions UI with
a tree of all `sendInput` commands
* [ ] Enable the `SuggestionsControl` to open with or without a search box
* [ ] Plumb support for shell-driven completions through the core up to the app
* [ ] Expose the _current_ commandline from the `TermControl`
* [ ] Add a `useCommandline` property to `suggestions`, to pre-populate the search with the current commandline.
* [ ] Add a `TeachingTip` (or similar) to the Suggestions UI to display
descriptions (when available)
* [ ] Use the `ToolTip` property of shell-driven suggestions as the description
* [ ] Add a boolean `nesting` property which can be used to disable nesting on the `tasks` source.
* [ ] Add the ability for `nesting` to accept `enabled`/`disabled` as `true`/`false` equivalents
* [ ] Add the ability for `nesting` to accept `source`, which instead groups all
commands to the Suggestions UI by the source of that suggestion.
### 🚀 Sprint
The two "sprint" tasks here are much more ambitious than the other listed
scenarios, so breaking them down to atomic tasks sees less reasonable. We'd have
to spend a considerable amount more time figuring out _how_ to do each of these
first.
For example - extensions. We have yet to fully realize what extensions _are_.
Determining how extensions will provide suggestions is left as something we'll
need to do as a part of the Extensions spec.
## Conclusion
Here's a sample json schema for the settings discussed here.
```json
"OpenSuggestionsAction":{
"description":"Arguments corresponding to a Open Suggestions Action",
"allOf":[
{
"$ref":"#/$defs/ShortcutAction"
},
{
"properties":{
"action":{
"type":"string",
"const":"suggestions"
},
"source":{
"$ref":"#/$defs/SuggestionSource",
"description":"Which suggestion sources to filter."
},
"useCommandline":{
"default":false,
"description":"When set to `true`, the current commandline the user has typed will pre-populate the filter of the Suggestions UI. This requires that the user has enabled shell integration in their shell's config. When set to false, the filter will start empty."
},
"nesting":{
"default":true,
"description":"When set to `true`, suggestions will follow the provided nesting structure. For Tasks, these will follow the structure of the Command Palette. When set to `false`, no nesting will be used (and all suggestions will be in the top-level menu.",
"$comment":"This setting is a possible follow-up setting, not required for v1. "
}
}
}
]
},
"BuiltinSuggestionSource":{
"enum":[
"commandHistory",
"directoryHistory",
"tasks",
"local",
"all"
],
"type":"string"
},
"SuggestionSource":{
"default":"all",
"description":"Either a single suggestion source, or an array of sources to concatenate. Built-in sources include `commandHistory`, `directoryHistory`, `tasks`, and `local`. Extensions may provide additional values. The special value `all` indicates all suggestion sources should be included",
"$comment":"`tasks` and `local` are sources that would be added by the Tasks feature, as a follow-up"
> I'm using `Docker` as an example fragment extension that provides
> some `docker` commands. When grouping by `"source"`, we could pull those into
> a separate top-level entry. When not grouping by `"source"`, those would still
> show up with the rest of `tasks`. )
#### Store recent commands across sessions
> **Note**
> _I'm not sure we really want to put this in this spec or not, hence
> why it is in the "Future considerations" section. I think it is worth
> mentioning. This might be better served in the [shell integration] doc._
We'll probably want a way for recent commands to be saved across sessions. That way, your `cmd.exe` command history could persist across sessions. We'd need:
* A setting to enable this behavior
* A setting to control the context of these saved commandlines.
* Do we want them saved per-profile, or globally?
* If they're saved per-profile, maybe a profile can opt-in to loading all the commands?
* How does defterm play with this? Do we "layer" by concatenating per-profile commands with `profiles.defaults` ones?
* A button in the Settings UI for clearing these commands
* Should fragments be able to pre-populate "recent commands"?
* I'm just gonna say _no_. That would be a better idea for Tasks (aka just a `sendInput` Action that we load from the fragment normally as a Task), or a specific suggestion source for the fragment extension.
#### Inline mode
> **Note**
> _This is a half-baked idea with some potential. However, I don't
> think it needs to be a part of the v1 of the Suggestions UI, so I'm leaving it
> under future considerations for a future revision._
Do we want to have a suggestions UI "mode", that's just **one** inline
suggestion, "no" UI? Some UX ala the `PsReadline` recent command suggestion
feature. Imagine, we just display the IME ghost text thing for the first result,
[The Old New Thing: How can I launch an unelevated process from my elevated process, redux]: https://devblogs.microsoft.com/oldnewthing/20190425-00/?p=102443
[Process Model 2.0 Spec]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/blob/main/doc/specs/%235000%20-%20Process%20Model%202.0/%235000%20-%20Process%20Model%202.0.md
[Process Model 2.0 Spec]: ./doc/specs/%235000%20-%20Process%20Model%202.0/%235000%20-%20Process%20Model%202.0.md
[Process Model 2.0 Spec]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/blob/main/doc/specs/%235000%20-%20Process%20Model%202.0/%235000%20-%20Process%20Model%202.0.md
[Process Model 2.0 Spec]: ../%235000%20-%20Process%20Model%202.0/%235000%20-%20Process%20Model%202.0.md
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