When disabled (the default), the cursor is positioned on a new line
after emitting a sixel image.
When enabled, the cursor is positioned to the right of the sixel
image.
Closes#363
When enabled (the default), sixels use private color registers. That
is, the color palette from the last sixel is *not* re-used.
When disabled, sixels share (i.e. re-use) the same color palette.
Closes#362
This patch adds a new configuration option,
‘osc8-underline=url-mode|always’.
When set to ‘url-mode’, OSC-8 URLs are only
highlighted (i.e. underlined) in url-mode, just like auto-detected
URLs.
When set to ‘always’, they are always underlined, regardless of mode,
and regardless of their other attributes.
This is implemented by tagging collected URLs with a boolean,
instructing urls_render() and urls_reset() whether they should update
the cells’ ‘url’ attribute or not.
The OSC-8 collecter sets this based on the value of ‘osc8-underline’.
Finally, when closing an OSC-8 URL, the cells are immediately tagged
with the ‘url’ attribute if ‘osc8-underline’ is set to ‘always’.
By default, the URL isn’t shown on the jump-label. For auto-detect
URLs, doing so is virtually always useless, as the URL is already
visible in the grid.
For OSC-8 URLs however, the URL is often _not_ visible in the
grid. Many times, seeing the URL is still not needed (if you’re doing
‘ls --hyperlink’, you already know what the URIs are).
But it is still useful to have a way to show the URLs.
This patch adds a new key binding action that can be used in url-mode
to toggle the URL on and off in the jump label.
It is bound to ctrl+t by default.
In case an URL is split up into multiple parts, those parts are now
treated as a single URL when it comes to key assignment.
Only the *first* URL part is actually assigned a key combo. The other
parts are ignored.
We still highlight them, but for all other purposes they are ignored.
These functions update the OSC-8 URI state in the terminal.
term_osc8_open() tracks the beginning of an URL, by storing the start
coordinate (i.e. the current cursor location), along with the URL
itself.
Note that term_osc8_open() may not be called with an empty URL. This
is important to notice, since the way OSC-8 works, applications close
an URL by “opening” a new, empty one:
\E]8;;https://foo.bar\e\\this is an OSC-8 URL\E]8;;\e\\
It is up to the caller to check for this, and call term_osc8_close()
instead of term_osc8_open() when the URL is empty.
However, it is *also* valid to switch directly from one URL to
another:
\E]8;;http://123\e\\First URL\E]8;;http//456\e\\Second URL\E]8;;\e\\
This use-case *is* handled by term_osc8_open().
term_osc8_close() uses the information from term_osc8_open() to add
per-row URL data (using the new ‘extra’ row data).
This patch adds an ‘extra’ member to the row struct. It is a pointer
to a struct containing extra data to be associated with this row.
Initially, this struct contains a list of URL ranges. These
define (OSC-8) URLs on this row.
The ‘extra’ data is allocated on-demand. I.e. the pointer is NULL by
default; it is *not* allocated by grid_row_alloc().
The only time the URL is actually in UTF-32 is when we’re collecting
it (auto-detecting it) from the grid, since cells store their
character(s) in UTF-32.
Everything *after* that prefers the URL in UTF-8. So, do the
conversion while collecting the URL.
This patch also changes the URL activation code to strip the
‘file://user@host/’ prefix from file URIs that refer to files
on the *local* computer.
In addition to letting the FDM do the low-level signal watching, this
patch also fixes a bug; multiple SIGCHLDs, be it delivered either through a
signal, or via a signalfd, can be coalesced, like all signals.
This means we need to loop on waitpid() with WNOHANG until there are
no more processes to reap.
This in turn requires a small change to the way reaper callbacks are
implemented.
Previously, the callback was allowed to do the wait(). This was
signalled back to the reaper through the callback’s return value.
Now, since we’ve already wait():ed, the process’ exit status is passed
as an argument to the reaper callback.
The callback for the client application has been updated accordingly;
it sets a flag in the terminal struct, telling term_destroy() that the
process has already been wait():ed on, and also stores the exit
status.
* We were using the ‘back’ element of the list as prefix for the next
iteration of sequences, instead of the element at index ‘offset’
* ALEN() on a wchar_t[] includes the NULL terminator. We don’t want
that.
This is implemented by allocating one of the (few!) remaining bits in
the cells’ attribute struct to indicate the cell should be “URL
highlighted”.
render_cell() looks at this bit and draws an underline using the color
from colors.urls (defaults to regular3 - i.e. yellow).
A new function, url_tag_cells(), iterates the currently detected URLs
and sets the new ‘url’ attribute flag on the affected cells.
Note: this is done in a separate function to keep urls_collect() free
from as many dependencies as possible.
urls_reset() is updated to *clear* the ‘url’ flag (and thus implicitly
also results in a grid refresh, _if_ there were any URLs).
We now exit URL mode on *any* client application input. This needs to
be so since we can’t know if the URLs we previously detected are still
valid.
This works just like show-urls-launch, except that instead of opening
the URL (typically using xdg-open), it is placed in the clipboard when
activated.
If the value is specified without a unit, then the value is assumed to
be in points, subject to DPI scaling.
The value can optionally have a ‘px’ suffix, in which case the value
is treated as a raw pixel count.
Extend selection pivoting to allow selections to pivot around a
range.
Use this in word- and row-based selections to pivot around the initial
word/row that was selected.
This mimics the behavior of at least urxvt and xterm.
* ‘term’ struct contains an array of 160 fcft glyph pointers
* the glyph pointers are lazily allocated when we need to draw a box
drawings character
* Filtering out box drawings characters is easy - they are (except
unicode 13, which isn’t handled yet )all in a single range.
Take ‘\E(#0’ for example - this is *not* the same as ‘\E(0’.
Up until now, foot has however treated them as the same escape,
because the handler for ‘\E(0’ didn’t verify there weren’t any _other_
private characters present.
Fix this by turning the ‘private’ array into a single 4-byte
integer. This allows us to match *all* privates with a single
comparison.
Private characters are added to the LSB first, and MSB last. This
means we can check for single privates in pretty much the same way as
before:
switch (term->vt.private) {
case ‘?’:
...
break;
}
Checking for two (or more) is much uglier, but foot only supports
a *single* escape with two privates, and no escapes with three or
more:
switch (term->vt.private) {
case 0x243f: /* ‘?$’ */
...
break;
}
The ‘clear’ action remains simple (and fast), with a single write
operation.
Collecting privates is potentially _slightly_ more complex than
before; we now need mask and compare, instead of simply comparing,
when checking how many privates we already have.
We _could_ add a counter, which would make collecting privates easier,
but this would add an additional write to the ‘clean’ action which is
really bad since it’s in the hot path.
This fixes issues with de-synchronized frames being rendered; we may
have scheduled a redraw earlier, that hasn’t yet triggered (probably
because we’re waiting for a frame callback), when we enable
application synchronized updates.
This means we risk rendering a partially updated state when the frame
callback finally arrives, if the application hasn’t yet ended its
synchronized update.
We may want to be able to enable/disable IME run-time, even though we
have received an ‘enter’ IME event.
This enables us to do that.
Also add functions to enable/disable IME on a per-terminal instance
basis.
A terminal may have multiple seats focusing it, and enabling/disabling
IME in a terminal instance enables/disables IME on all those seats.
Finally, the code to enable IME is simplified; the *only* surface that
can ever receive ‘enter’ IME events is the main grid. All other
surfaces are sub-surfaces, without their own keyboard focus.
This is done by allocating cells for the pre-edit text when receiving
the text-input::done() call, and populating them by converting the
utf-8 formatted pre-edit text to wchars.
We also convert the pre-edit cursor position to cell positions (it can
cover multiple cells).
When rendering, we simply render the pre-edit cells on-top off the
regular grid. While doing so, we also mark the underlying, “real”,
cells as dirty, to ensure they are re-rendered when the pre-edit text
is modified or removed.
This mode can be set by client programs with the DECSET, DECRST,
XTSAVE and XTRESTORE sequences by using 27127 as the parameter.
The sequence "\E[27;1;27~" is encoded in the same way as is done by
xterm's "modifyOtherKeys" mode. Even though xterm itself never emits
such a sequence for the Escape key, many programs already have
support for parsing this style of key sequence.
There are two different escape sequences that can be used to set the
cursor blink state: ‘CSI ? 12 h/l’ and ‘CSI Ps SP q’.
Up until now, they both modified the same internal state in foot. This
meant you could enable a blinking cursor with e.g. ‘CSI ? 12 h’ and
then disable it with ‘CSI 2 SP q’.
Since the ‘CSI ? 12’ escapes are used in the civis/cnorm/cvvis
terminfo entries, applications often ended up disabling the blink
state on exit (typically be emitting ‘cnorm’), requiring users to
manually re-enable blinking.
By splitting the internal state into two separate states, we can
improve the situation.
The cursor will blink if at least one of the two have been enabled.
The setting in foot.ini sets the default state of the ‘CSI Ps SP q’
escape.
This means if the user has enabled blinking in the configuration, the
cursor will blink regardless of civis/cnorm/cvvis. Which probably is
what the user wants.
If the user has NOT enabled blinking, civis/cnorm/cvvis act as
intended: cvvis blink, civis and cnorm do not.
If an application overrides the cursor blink/style with ‘CSI Ps SP q’,
that will override the user’s setting in foot.ini. But most likely
that too is intended (for example, the user may have configured the
application to use a different cursor style). And, a well written
application will emit the ‘Se’ terminfo sequence on exit, which in
foot is defined to ‘CSI SP q’, which will reset both the style and
blink state to the user configured style/state.
Closes#218
When disabled, foot no longers uses outputs’ DPI to scale the
font. Instead, it uses the outputs’ scaling factor.
That is, instead of appending “:dpi=123” to the fontconfig string,
modify the “:pixelsize” or “:size” attribute.
Closes#206
These options lets the user configure custom fonts and styles, to use
with the bold and italic cell attributes.
By default, they are unset, meaning we use the bold/italic variants of
the regular font.
Closes#169.
Bind to xdg-shell version 2 if available, as this enables us to
track our window’s ‘tiled’ state in the ‘configure’ events.
This in turn allows us to stash the ‘old’ window size when being
tiled, to be used again when restoring the window size when un-tiled.