Ghostty has had support for a while (since PR #3124) for parsing progress
reports but never did anything with them. This PR adds the core
infrastructure and an implementation for GTK.
On GTK, the progress bar will show up as a thin bar along the top of
the terminal. Under normal circumstances it will use whatever you have
set as your accent color. If the progam sending the progress report
indicates an error, it will change to a reddish color.
This ports the config errors dialog from `apprt/gtk` to `gtk-ng`.
The major change here is that we now use proper template bindings for
the content. To do this, a `ghostty.Config` is now wrapped in a GObject
`GhosttyConfig` to make it safe to pass around (ref count) and to
provide helpful properties like the diagnostics buffer we bind to.
As a minor change, I stripped the `Ghostty` prefix from our GObject
classes in Zig code. For templates its all still there as is the norm.
This retains the exact same version requirements and layout as the
existing one.
Looks like 52354b8 missed noting the outgoing screen selection state's
rectangle flag when setting the selection on mouse release, this was
causing the selection that was actually set to be
standard/wrap-selected. This corrects that by just shipping said flag
when calling `setSelection`.
Looks like 52354b8 missed noting the outgoing screen selection state's
rectangle flag when setting the selection on mouse release, this was
causing the selection that was actually set to be
standard/wrap-selected. This corrects that by just shipping said flag
when calling setSelection.
Surprise, @ghostty-org/gtk! Hopefully a happy one.
This PR introduces the boilerplate for a new apprt I'm calling `gtk-ng`.
The `gtk-ng` apprt is still GTK, but built up from first principles
using the GObject type system, Blueprint files, etc. This will
ultimately replace and become `gtk` (the `-ng` suffix will be stripped
once we fully replace our existing GTK apprt).
In this PR, the `gtk-ng` apprt does nothing more but show a "Hello,
Ghostty" GTK window. It doesn't run a terminal, yet. 😄 I want to
use this PR to introduce the boilerplate and share my motivations.
Since `gtk-ng` and `gtk` are separate apprts, I can PR small,
reviewable, and risky changes into `gtk-ng` rather than opening some
mega-PR that replaces everything all at once. Simultaneously, we can
continue to iterate on and maintain our shipping `gtk` apprt without
dealing with conflicts.
> [!IMPORTANT]
>
> To reiterate, this PR doesn't change anything about our `gtk` apprt.
Builds by default will still use the `gtk` apprt and we can continue to
build both `gtk` and `gtk-ng` side by side (actually, a very important
property until we can be confident we've reached parity).
## A Refactor, Not a Rewrite
The primary goal of this apprt is to _primarily_ be a **refactor, not a
rewrite.**
As much as possible, I'm going to be bringing over a lot of the same
logic from `gtk` as long as it fits and makes sense, but applying it to
our new structure and lifecycle. For example in this PR you can see how
we handle style manager, cgroups, etc. and how that fits within the new
`GhosttyApplication` class.
Our GTK apprt from a business logic standpoint is _pretty damn good_ and
_pretty damn stable_. There's no need to rock that boat and try to
rewrite core logic such as input handling, X11/Wayland stuff, etc. It
just has to be massaged into the new structure.
## Why?
**Object-oriented, reference-counted systems are good for UI,
actually.** Experience iterating on the non-trivial macOS application
has really reaffirmed that OOP and memory managed systems are really,
really nice for GUI. I'm not a huge OOP fan in general, but it fits GUI
patterns extremely well. And memory management of any form (GC, Ref
Counts, etc.) is important in GUIs where "objects" are handed off to
various owners at different times, the most concrete example being:
splits moving across windows or into an undo management system.
**Blueprint and UI definitions have been a success.** These were
introduced in an incremental way into the `apprt/gtk` (thanks ❤️ )
and have been great. But our existing non-GObject system makes it hard
to go _all in_ on them, e.g. bindings. Moving to a full GObject-based
system will let us fully adopt this.
**`zig-gobject` is good and stable.** This didn't really exist when we
started the GTK apprt (see the long history below). Since adopting it,
its proven to be an excellent, stable dependency. I'm ready to go all-in
on it.
**Memory management has been a challenge.** Our mix of GObject and
non-GObject lifetimes within the GTK apprt has consistently been a
source of memory leaks at best and crashes at worst. For example,
`Window`, `Surface`, `Tab`, etc. have weird lifetimes that we try to
pair alongside their GTK counterparts and its nasty and I don't think
anyone who maintains this will disagree. By representing all of these
concepts as GObject or Widget subclasses, we'll align all their
lifetimes as expected.
**Personally, I've grown a lot, particularly from working on the macOS
side.** I think all of us as programmers can agree that _programming in
multiple languages makes us better programmers_. Similarly, building the
macOS app has shown me patterns and techniques that would make our
GTK-based application better. I'd like to bring those to the GTK side.
(Likewise, I've improved the macOS side from periods of time working on
the GTK side and I suspect that might happen again!)
### Longer Background
It's easy to rewrite. And I think our maintainers know that I'm not a
fan of rewrites. I think its the wrong decision most of the time. It is
easy to look at "legacy" code (especially code you didn't write
yourself), be disgusted, and think you can rewrite it all better. But no
engineer sets out to create technical debt, and I think its worth
respecting how and why some code came to be before embarking on
something new. This section does that.
#### The Beginning
Ghostty started as a pure Zig-based GLFW app, with no concept of
"apprt". It was Linux-only, and X11-only. At some point, I refactored
out the "apprt" system in order to introduce GTK4 (GTK4 came before any
macOS work). For the initial GTK4 work, I decided to just call into the
libgtk C APIs directly. There were various contributing factors for this
decision:
1. Zig was _rapidly_ changing, and we were on nightly Zig. This was
around the Zig 0.11, 0.12 times. Taking on new Zig dependencies was
really dangerous because Zig nightly could break all of us at any
moment.
2. [`zig-gobject`](https://github.com/ianprime0509/zig-gobject) was
brand new and unstable. Given point 1, I discarded it and did straight C
APIs.
3. Ghostty itself was very simple. We didn't support tabs, we didn't
support splits. We were still primarily concerned with making the
terminal stable. We weren't on the "native UI" part of our roadmap quite
yet. This was our initial foray in that direction.
4. On a personal level, I hadn't done real native GUI programming in a
_long_ time (on any platform). Recall the macOS apprt didn't exist yet,
either. Jumping into "plain old Zig" with "plain old C APIs" was a
practical, no-nonsense way for me to get going.
Given all this, I still believe I (it was only me then) made the right
decision for the time.
#### Zig, GTK apprt Stabilization
Eventually, the factors listed above changed: (1) Zig stabilized more
and Ghostty moved to stable Zig for various reasons. (2) `zig-gobject`
became a mature, stable library. (3) Ghostty the application has become
increasingly complex (in a good way, we support a ton of awesome
"platform UI" features).
Socially, the @ghostty-org/gtk subsystem team was created and is filled
with people who are experienced with GTK and Linux in general. This team
introduced more idiomatic GTK concepts into the project such as
blueprint files, a `zig-gobject` migration, and more.
The @ghostty-org/gtk subsystem maintainers have done an awesome job
iterating on this change within the existing `apprt/gtk`. This has been
often frustrating, but it was a pragmatic approach to move us towards
the future and let us ship new features into GTK4 to pursue our platform
UI goals.
#### GUI Maturity
We're now at the point where the core Ghostty terminal (the core,
terminal emulation) is incredibly stable. We don't have exact numbers
but we can confidently assume its used by thousands of people everyday
for real, professional work.
As such, most of the changes within the 1.1 and 1.2 cycle have been at
the apprt/GUI layer, introducing significantly more complexity:
localization, more X11/Wayland integrations, more text to native
elements like the process exit overlay, etc.
I recently rewrote the entire terminal, tab, and split data model in the
macOS app to give us a better foundation for future functionality, and
to improve our memory management story (surface leaks were a common
problem before, and they haven't happened since since the lifetime of a
surface is so much more obvious). This also let me iterate more quickly
on more features such as undo/redo, but will also more easily enable
things like split titles, merging splits into tabs/windows, etc. (not
done yet).
I think its time for this type of change within the GTK apprt as well.
We have the collective real world experience and we've put in the work
in iteration to understand what needs to be done.
The XDG Freedesktop Portal has a _major_ undocumented requirement for
programs that are launched/controlled by `systemd` to interact with the
Portal. The unit _must_ be named `app-<appid>.service`. The Portal uses
the systemd unit name figure out what the program's application ID is
and it will only look at unit names that begin with `app-`. I can find
no place that this is documented other than by inspecting the code or
the
issue and PR that introduced this feature. See the following code:
7d4d48cf07/src/xdp-utils.c (L152-L220)
This may fix many people's issues with getting global shortcuts
to work.
Note that this is a breaking change if you have been using Ghostty
compiled from source since
https://github.com/ghostty-org/ghostty/pull/7433 was merged. You will
need to ensure
that any Ghosty systemd unit files _not_ prefixed with `app-` are
deleted.
Original discussion/PR in the XDG Desktop Portal repository:
https://github.com/flatpak/xdg-desktop-portal/issues/579https://github.com/flatpak/xdg-desktop-portal/pull/719
Originally discussed on Discord:
https://discord.com/channels/1005603569187160125/1394845362186879026
Co-authored-by: ambareeshbalaji@gmail.com
The XDG Freedesktop Portal has a _major_ undocumented requirement for
programs that are launched/controlled by `systemd` to interact with the
Portal. The unit _must_ be named `app-<appid>.service`. The Portal uses
the systemd unit name figure out what the program's application ID is
and it will only look at unit names that begin with `app-`. I can find
no place that this is documented other than by inspecting the code or the
issue and PR that introduced this feature. See the following code:
7d4d48cf07/src/xdp-utils.c (L152-L220)
This may fix many people's issues with getting global shortcuts
to work.
Note that this is a breaking change if you have been using Ghostty
compiled from source since #7433 was merged. You will need to ensure
that any Ghosty systemd unit files _not_ prefixed with `app-` are
deleted.
Original discussion/PR in the XDG Desktop Portal repository:
https://github.com/flatpak/xdg-desktop-portal/issues/579https://github.com/flatpak/xdg-desktop-portal/pull/719
Originally discussed on Discord:
https://discord.com/channels/1005603569187160125/1394845362186879026
Co-authored-by: ambareeshbalaji@gmail.com
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There are still problems linking due to `gettext`. No idea if this
actually _works_ on Windows. File locking had to be disabled on Windows
because of a bug in the Zig std library. Adding all of the explicit
error sets happened due to disabling file locking. Fixing permissions
had to be disabled on Windows as the Windows file system does not
support permissions in the way that POSIX systems like macOS and Linux
do.
There are still problems linking due to `gettext`. No idea if this
actually _works_ on Windows. File locking had to be disabled on Windows
because of a bug in the Zig std library. Adding all of the explicit
error sets happened due to disabling file locking. Fixing permissions
had to be disabled on Windows as the Windows file system does not
support permissions in the way that POSIX systems like macOS and Linux
do.
This will (on GTK) use a D-Bus method call to tell a running Ghostty
instance to open a new window. If D-Bus activation is configured
properly, Ghostty does not need to be running first.
This could be extended to other platforms, e.g. AppleScript on macOS.
When Ghostty develops a native API, that could be used instead to create
a new window.