This will be needed to the convert GTK apprt surfaces to a DerivedConfig
model rather than accessing the global config stored in the app. It's a
no-op for now, but I have a PR in the works to update the resize overlay
that will take advantage of this.
Menus (context menus and the window hamburger menu) now use popovers and
are defined using GTK builder UI files. This is a bit more "modern" and
reduces the amount of code to define menus.
Related to #3224
Previously, Ghostty used a static API for async event handling: io_uring
on Linux, kqueue on macOS. This commit changes the backend to be dynamic
on Linux so that epoll will be used if io_uring isn't available, or if
the user explicitly chooses it.
This introduces a new config `async-backend` (default "auto") which can
be set by the user to change the async backend in use. This is a
best-effort setting: if the user requests io_uring but it isn't
available, Ghostty will fall back to something that is and that choice
is up to us.
Basic benchmarking both in libxev and Ghostty (vtebench) show no
noticeable performance differences introducing the dynamic API, nor
choosing epoll over io_uring.
The GTK side of appearance code is kind of a mess with several different
functions all having the responsibility of interacting with each other
and setting the appropriate window appearance. It should solely be the
responsibility of the `syncAppearance` function to apply appearance
changes, with other callbacks/functions calling it instead: much like
what we already do for the macOS apprt.
`std.debug.assert(x)` _is not_ the same as `if (!x) unreachable`
because the function call is not `inline`. Since it's not inline the
Zig compiler will try to compile any code that might otherwise be
unreachable.
Also, added a CI test that compiles Ghostty in a Debian 12 container to
ensure that regressions do not happen.
Added snap packaging, fixes#3153
If whoever registered the name in the snap store could add me as a
collaborator, I can handle getting it released in the store, setup
automated builds, and request the necessary classic permissions in the
store.
This commit removes support for building without libadwaita. (Y'all knew
that I just had this sitting in my back pocket). This will need some
serious review to ensure that we haven't lost any functionality.
In Termio.init, we make a copy of backend and modify it by calling
initTerminal. However, we used the original in the struct definition.
This lead to the pty being opened with a size 0,0.
Fixes#5257
Specify environment variables to pass to commands launched in a terminal
surface. The format is `env=KEY=VALUE`.
`env = foo=bar`
`env = bar=baz`
Setting `env` to an empty string will reset the entire map to default
(empty).
`env =`
Setting a key to an empty string will remove that particular key and
corresponding value from the map.
`env = foo=bar`
`env = foo=`
will result in `foo` not being passed to the launched commands. Setting
a key multiple times will overwrite previous entries.
`env = foo=bar`
`env = foo=baz`
will result in `foo=baz` being passed to the launched commands.
These environment variables _will not_ be passed to commands run by
Ghostty for other purposes, like `open` or `xdg-open` used to open URLs
in your browser.
Fixes#5257
Specify environment variables to pass to commands launched in a terminal
surface. The format is `env=KEY=VALUE`.
`env = foo=bar`
`env = bar=baz`
Setting `env` to an empty string will reset the entire map to default
(empty).
`env =`
Setting a key to an empty string will remove that particular key and
corresponding value from the map.
`env = foo=bar`
`env = foo=`
will result in `foo` not being passed to the launched commands.
Setting a key multiple times will overwrite previous entries.
`env = foo=bar`
`env = foo=baz`
will result in `foo=baz` being passed to the launched commands.
These environment variables _will not_ be passed to commands run by Ghostty
for other purposes, like `open` or `xdg-open` used to open URLs in your
browser.