In fact, there appears there *is* no escape sequence to set the icon.
Keep most of the logic in place, but in practice, we'll always set the
icon to the app-id. That is, at startup, we set it to the configured
app-id (either from config, or the command line).
OSC-176, which sets the app-id, also updates the icon (to the app-id).
* The toplevel icon is now set to the app-id, unless "overridden" by
OSC-1 or OSC-0.
* Implemented OSC-1
* OSC-0 extended to also set the icon
* Implemented CSI 20 t - report window icon
* Implemented CSI 21 t - report window title
* Implemented CSI 22 ; 1 t - push window icon
* Implemented CS 23 ; 1 t - pop window icon
* Extended CSI 22/23 ; 0 t to also push/pop the icon
* Verify app-id set by OSC-176 is valid UTF-8
* Verify icon set by OSC-0/1 is valid UTF-8
Summary of changes:
* Make xvsnprintf() static
* restrict-qualify pointer arguments (as done by the libc equivalents)
* Make comments and spec references more thorough
* Remove pointless `n <= INT_MAX` assertion (see comment)
* Use FATAL_ERROR() instead of xassert() (since the assertion is inside
a shared util function but the caller is responsible for ensuring the
condition holds true)
* Change some callers to use size_t instead of int for the return value
(negative returns are impossible and all subsequent uses are size_t)
The updated comments and code were taken (and adapted) from:
49260bb154/src/util/xsnprintf.c (L6-50)
This work was entirely authored by me and I hereby license this
contribution under the MIT license (stated explicitly, so that
there's no ambiguity w.r.t. the original license).
Or put more propertly; if the notification daemon, and the
notification helper used by foot has been configured
properly (i.e. they both support XDG activation tokens), notifications
generated by BEL and OSC-777 will now raise/focus the window when the
default action of the notification is activated - typically by
clicking the notification.
Closes#1822
When the background alpha changes from fully opaque, to transparent,
or vice versa, we need to do more than just repaint the affected
cells.
For example, we need to create new surfaces with the correct pixel
format.
OSC-11 (set background color) already does this, but the same alpha
checking logic was missing in OSC-111 (reset background color).
Fixes#1801
* The spec now defines a couple of "standard" names. Translate these
to the freedesktop compliant names.
* The query response no longer contains 'xdg-names', but instead list
the supported standard names.
This implements part of the new 's' (sound) parameter; the 'silent'
value. When s=silent, we set the ${muted} template argument to
"true". It is intended to set the 'suppress-sound' hint:
notify-send --hint BOOLEAN:suppress-sound:${muted}
Notification IDs must only use characters from [a-zA-Z0-9_-+.]
Terminals **must** sanitize ids received from client programs
before sending them back in responses, to mitigate input injection
based attacks. That is, they must either reject ids containing
characters not from the above set, or remove bad characters when
reading ids sent to them.
Foot implements the first: reject IDs containing characters not from
the above set.
This avoids the need for an unused third argument for most xstrjoin()
calls and replaces the cases where it's needed with a more flexible
function. Code generation is the same in both cases, when there are 2
string params and a compile-time known delimiter.
This commit also converts 4 uses of xasprintf() to use xstrjoin*().
See also: https://godbolt.org/z/xsjrhv9b6
* Don't store a list of unfinished notifications. Use a single one. If
the notification ID of the 'current' notification doesn't match the
previous, unfinished one, the 'current' notification replaces the
previous one, instead of updating it.
* Update xstrjoin() to take an optional delimiter (for example ','),
and use that when joining categories and 'alive IDs'.
* Rename ${action-arg} to ${action-argument}
* Update handling of the 'n' parameter (symbolic icon name); the spec
allows it to be used multiple times, and the terminal is supposed to
pick the first one it can resolve. Foot can't resolve icons at all,
neither can 'notify-send' or 'fyi' (which is what foot typically
executes to display a notification); it's the notification daemon that
resolves icons.
The spec _could_ be interpreted to mean the terminal should lookup
.desktop files, and use the value of the 'Icon' key from the first
matching .desktop files. But foot doesn't read .desktop files, and I
don't intend to implement XDG directory scanning and parsing of
.desktop files just to figure out which icon to use.
Instead, use a simple heuristics; use the *shortest* symbolic
names. The idea is pretty simple: plain icon names are typically
shorter than .desktop file IDs.
First, icons have been finalized in the specification. There were only
three things we needed to adjust:
* symbolic names are base64 encoded
* there are a couple of OSC-99 defined symbolic names that need to be
translated to the corresponding XDG icon name.
* allow in-band icons without a cache ID (that is, allow applications
to use p=icon without having to cache the icon first).
Second, add support for the following new additions to the protocol:
* 'f': custom app-name, overrides the terminal's app-id
* 't': categories
* 'p=alive': lets applications poll for currently active notifications
* 'id' is now 'unset' by default, rather than "0"
* 'w': expire time (i.e. notification timeout)
* "buttons": aka actions. This lets applications add additional (to
the terminal defined "default" action) actions. The 'activated' event
has been updated to report which button/action was used to activate
the notification.
To support button/actions, desktop-notifications.command had to be
reworked a bit.
There's now a new config option:
desktop-notifications.command-action-arg. It has two template
arguments ${action-name} and ${action-label}.
command-action-arg gets expanded for *each* action.
${action-name} and ${action-label} has been replaced by ${action-arg}
in command. This is a somewhat special template, in that it gets
replaced by *all* instances of the expanded actions.
If the user hasn't configured a custom 'desktop-notifications.close'
command, try to close the notification by sending SIGINT to the
notification helper.
This is best-effort:
* If there's no helper running, we do nothing (except warn)
* We don't verify, in any way, the notification is actually closed
* We don't send any other signals, under any circumstances. That is,
no SIGTERM, no SIGKILL. Ever.
Add a new config option, desktop-notifications.close, defining what to
execute to close a notification. It has a single template parameter,
${id}, that is expanded to the external notification ID foot may have
picked up from the notification helper.
notify-send does not support closing notifications, and it appears
impossible to pass an *unsigned* integer as argument to gdbus. Hence
no default value for the new 'close' option.
Example:
printf '\e]99;i=123;this is a notification\e\\'
printf '\e]99;i=123:p=close;\e\\'
Application can now request to receive a 'close' event when the
notification is closed (but not necessarily activated), by adding
'c=1' to the notification request.
This fixes an issue where it wasn't possible to trigger multiple
notifications with the same kitty notification ID. This is something
that works in kitty, and there's no reason why it shouldn't work.
The issue was that we track stdout, and the notification helper's PID
in the notification struct. Thus, when a notification is being
displayed, we can't re-use the same notification struct instance for
another notification.
This patch fixes this by adding a new notification list,
'active_notifications'. Whenever we detect that we need to track the
helper (notification want's to either focus the window on activation,
or send an event to the application), we add a copy of the
notification to the 'active' list.
The notification can then be removed from the 'kitty' list, allowing
kitty notifications to re-use the same ID over and over again, even if
old notifications are still being displayed.
This implements the suggested protocol discussed in
https://github.com/kovidgoyal/kitty/issues/7657.
Icons are handled by loading a cache. Both in-band PNG data, and
symbolic names are allowed.
Applications use a graphical ID to reference the icon both when
loading the cache, and when showing a notification.
* 'g' is the graphical ID
* 'n' is optional, and assigns a symbolic name to the icon
* 'p=icon' - the payload is icon PNG data. It needs to be base64
encoded, but this is *not* implied. I.e. the application *must* use
e=1 explicitly.
To load an icon (in-band PNG data):
printf '\e]99;g=123:p=icon;<base64-encoded-png-data>\e\\'
or (symbolic name)
printf '\e]99;g=123:n=firefox:p=icon;\e\\'
Of course, we can combine the two, assigning *both* a symbolic
name, *and* PNG data:
printf '\e]99;g=123:n=firefox:p=icon;<base64-encoded-png>\e\\'
Then, to use the icon in a notification:
printf '\e]99;g=123;this is a notification\e\\'
Foot also allows a *symbolic* icon to be defined and used at the same
time:
printf '\e]99;g=123:n=firefox;this is a notification\e\\'
This obviously won't work with PNG data, since it uses the payload
portion of the escape sequence.
This patch adds support for window focusing, and sending events back
to the client application when a notification is closed.
* Refactor notification related configuration options:
- add desktop-notifications sub-section
- deprecate 'notify' in favor of 'desktop-notifications.command'
- deprecate 'notify-focus-inhibit' in favor of
'desktop-notifications.inhibit-when-focused'
* Refactor: rename 'struct kitty_notification' to 'struct
notification'
* Pass a 'struct notification' to notify_notify(), instead of many
arguments.
* notify_notify() now registers a reaper callback. When the notifier
process has terminated, the notification is considered closed, and we
either try to focus (activate) the window, or send an event to the
client application, depending on the notification setting.
* For the window activation, we need an XDG activation token. For now,
assume *everything* written on stdout is part of the token.
* Refactor: remove much of the warnings from OSC-99; we don't
typically log anything when an OSC/CSI has invalid values.
* Add icon support to OSC-99. This isn't part of the upstream
spec. Foot's implementation:
- uses the 'I' parameter
- the value is expected to be a symbolic icon name
- a quick check for absolute paths is done, and such icon requests
are ignored.
* Added ${icon} to the 'desktop-notifications.command' template. Uses
the icon specified in the notification, or ${app-id} if not set.
This adds limited support for OSC-99, kitty desktop notifications[^1]. We
support everything defined by the "protocol", except:
* 'a': action to perform on notification activation. Since we don't
trigger the notification ourselves (over D-Bus), we don't know a)
which ID the notification got, or b) when it is clicked.
* ... and that's it. Everything else is supported
To be explicit, we *do* support:
* Chunked notifications (d=0|1), allowing the application to append
data to a notification in chunks, before it's finally displayed.
* Plain UTF-8, or base64-encoded UTF-8 payload (e=0|1).
* Notification identifier (i=xyz).
* Payload type (p=title|body).
* When to honor the notification (o=always|unfocused|invisible), with
the following quirks:
- we don't know when the window is invisible, thus it's treated as
'unfocused'.
- the foot option 'notify-focus-inhibit' overrides 'always'
* Urgency (u=0|1|2)
[^1]: https://sw.kovidgoyal.net/kitty/desktop-notifications/
When changing part of the color palette, through either OSC-4, or
OSC-10 and OSC-11 (and the corresponding reset OSCs: 104, 110 and
111), only dirty affected cells.
We've always done this, but only for OSC-4.
This patch breaks out that logic, and extends it to handle default
fg/bg too.
It also fixes a bug where cells with colored underlines were not
dirtied if the underline was the only part of the cell that was
affected by a OSC-4 change.
10/11/17/19 were already merged, so this patch just stops special
casing 12 (cursor color).
In preparation for XTPUSHCOLORS/XTPOPCOLORS, the cursor colors are
moved from their own struct, into the 'colors' struct.
Also fix a bug where OSC 17/19 queries returned OSC-11 data.
This fixes an issue where other data (such as replies to other
requests) being interleaved with the OSC-52 reply.
The patch piggy backs on the already existing mechanism for handling
regular pastes, where other data is queued up until the paste is done.
There's one corner case that won't work; if the user *just* did a
normal paste (i.e. at virtually the same time the application
requested OSC-52 data), the OSC-52 request will return an empty reply.
Likewise, if there are multiple OSC-52 requests at the same time, only
the first will return data.
Closes#1734
This adds support for a new OSC escape sequence: OSC 176, that lets
terminal programs tell the terminal the name of the app that is
running. foot then sets the app ID of the toplevel to that ID,
which lets the compositor know which app is running, and typically
sets the appropriate icon, window grouping, ...
See: https://gist.github.com/delthas/d451e2cc1573bb2364839849c7117239
When background alpha is changed at runtime (using OSC-11), we (may)
have to update the opaque hint we send to the compositor.
We must also update the subpixel mode used when rendering font
glyphs.
Why?
When the window is fully opaque, we use wl_surface_set_opaque_region()
on the entire surface, to hint to the compositor that it doesn’t have
to blend the window content with whatever is behind the
window. Obviously, if alpha is changed from opaque, to transparent (or
semi-transparent), that hint must be removed.
Sub-pixel mode is harder to explain, but in short, we can’t do
subpixel hinting with a (semi-)transparent background. Thus, similar
to the opaque hint, subpixel antialiasing must be enabled/disabled
when background alpha is changed.
This patch adds support for the OSC-133;A sequence, introduced by
FinalTerm and implemented by iTerm2, Kitty and more. See
https://iterm2.com/documentation-one-page.html#documentation-escape-codes.html.
The shell emits the OSC just before printing the prompt. This lets the
terminal know where, in the scrollback, there are prompts.
We implement this using a simple boolean in the row struct ("this row
has a prompt"). The prompt marker must be reflowed along with the text
on window resizes.
In an ideal world, erasing, or overwriting the cell where the OSC was
emitted, would remove the prompt mark. Since we don't store this
information in the cell struct, we can't do that. The best we can do
is reset it in erase_line(). This works well enough in the "normal"
screen, when used with a "normal" shell. It doesn't really work in
fullscreen apps, on the alt screen. But that doesn't matter since we
don't support jumping between prompts on the alt screen anyway.
To be able to jump between prompts, two new key bindings have been
added: prompt-prev and prompt-next, bound to ctrl+shift+z and
ctrl+shift+x respectively.
prompt-prev will jump to the previous, not currently visible, prompt,
by moving the viewport, ensuring the prompt is at the top of the
screen.
prompt-next jumps to the next prompt, visible or not. Again, by moving
the viewport to ensure the prompt is at the top of the screen. If
we're at the bottom of the scrollback, the viewport is instead moved
as far down as possible.
Closes#30
Checking for specific strings of length 0 or 1 can be done with e.g.:
if (str[0] == '\0') {...}
if (str[0] == '?' && str[1] == '\0') {...}
Doing it this way instead of using strlen(3) means we avoid the
function call overhead and also avoid scanning through more of the
string than is neceessary.
A compiler could perhaps optimize away calls to strlen(3) when the
result is compared to a small constant, but GCC 11.2 only seems to
actually do this[1] for lengths of 0.
[1]: https://godbolt.org/z/qxoW8qqW6
With fixed increments of 128 bytes, an OSC 52 copy operation could end
up doing thousands or tens of thousands of realloc(3) calls just to
copy a few MB.
When using indexed colors (i.e. SGR 30/40/90/100), store the index
into the cell’s fg/bg attributes, not the actual color value.
This has a couple of consequences:
Color table lookup is now done when rendering. This means a rendered
cell will always reflect the *current* color table, not the color
table that was in use when the cell was printed to.
This simplifies the OSC-4/104 logic, since we no longer need to update
the grid - we just have to damage it to trigger rendering.
Furthermore, this change simplifies the VT parsing, since we no longer
need to do any memory loads (except loading the SGR parameter values),
only writes.