This commit reduces the code surface that interacts with raw JSON data,
reducing code complexity and improving maintainability.
Files that needed to be changed drastically were additionally
cleaned up to remove any code cruft that has accrued over time.
In order to facility this the following changes were made:
* Move JSON handling from `CascadiaSettings` into `SettingsLoader`
This allows us to use STL containers for data model instances.
For instance profiles are now added to a hashmap for O(1) lookup.
* JSON parsing within `SettingsLoader` doesn't differentiate between user,
inbox and fragment JSON data, reducing code complexity and size.
It also centralizes common concerns, like profile deduplication and
ensuring that all profiles are assigned a GUID.
* Direct JSON modification, like the insertion of dynamic profiles into
settings.json were removed. This vastly reduces code complexity,
but unfortunately removes support for comments in JSON on first start.
* `ColorScheme`s cannot be layered. As such its `LayerJson` API was replaced
with `FromJson`, allowing us to remove JSON-based color scheme validation.
* `Profile`s used to test their wish to layer using `ShouldBeLayered`, which
was replaced with a GUID-based hashmap lookup on previously parsed profiles.
Further changes were made as improvements upon the previous changes:
* Compact the JSON files embedded binary, saving 28kB
* Prevent double-initialization of the color table in `ColorScheme`
* Making `til::color` getters `constexpr`, allow better optimizations
The result is a reduction of:
* 48kB binary size for the Settings.Model.dll
* 5-10% startup duration
* 26% code for the `CascadiaSettings` class
* 1% overall code in this project
Furthermore this results in the following breaking changes:
* The long deprecated "globals" settings object will not be detected and no
warning will be created during load.
* The initial creation of a new settings.json will not produce helpful comments.
Both cases are caused by the removal of manual JSON handling and the
move to representing the settings file with model objects instead
## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes#5276
* [x] Closes#7421
* [x] I work here
* [x] Tests added/passed
## Validation Steps Performed
* Out-of-box-experience is identical to before ✔️
(Except for the settings.json file lacking comments.)
* Existing user settings load correctly ✔️
* New WSL instances are added to user settings ✔️
* New fragments are added to user settings ✔️
* All profiles are assigned GUIDs ✔️
* this is the same thing as #10996, but with the fix that caused us to #11031
* This includes https://github.com/microsoft/microsoft-ui-xaml/pull/3769, so we had to make some adjustments to how we handle tab colors. It works the same as before.
* Should enable #11231 to be started
* [x] Closes#10508
* [x] Closes#7133
* [x] Closes#8948
* [ ] I need to finish letting my 19H1 VM boot to make sure unpackaged still works
This commit moves us from MUX 2.5 to MUX 2.6. I have temporarily
disabled the new control styles in `TerminalApp\App.xaml` by setting
`ControlsResourcesVersion` to `Version1`. There is no significant expected
visual impact.
Closes#10508
C++/WinRT has a way to ensure that we use `make<>` instead of allocating
WinRT objects on the stack, but until 10.0.19041 the XAML compiler
generated code that violated that rule.
Because of how make detection is implemented, it must create a derived
type (and so WinRT implementation types can't be `final`).
## Summary of the Pull Request
Upgrade the Windows SDK to 19041 by setting `WindowsTargetPlatformMinVersion` to 17763 and `WindowsTargetPlatformVersion` to 19041.
## PR Checklist
* [x] I work here
* [x] Tests added/passed
## Validation Steps Performed
General usage of the Windows Terminal application appears fine.
This entirely removes `KeyMapping` from the settings model, and builds on the work done in #9543 to consolidate all actions (key bindings and commands) into a unified data structure (`ActionMap`).
## References
#9428 - Spec
#6900 - Actions page
Closes#7441
## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments
The important thing here is to remember that we're shifting our philosophy of how to interact/represent actions. Prior to this, the actions arrays in the JSON would be deserialized twice: once for key bindings, and again for commands. By thinking of every entry in the relevant JSON as a `Command`, we can remove a lot of the context switching between working with a key binding vs a command palette item.
#9543 allows us to make that shift. Given the work in that PR, we can now deserialize all of the relevant information from each JSON action item. This allows us to simplify `ActionMap::FromJson` to simply iterate over each JSON action item, deserialize it, and add it to our `ActionMap`.
Internally, our `ActionMap` operates as discussed in #9428 by maintaining a `_KeyMap` that points to an action ID, and using that action ID to retrieve the `Command` from the `_ActionMap`. Adding actions to the `ActionMap` automatically accounts for name/key-chord collisions. A `NameMap` can be constructed when requested; this is for the Command Palette.
Querying the `ActionMap` is fairly straightforward. Helper functions were needed to be able to distinguish an explicit unbinding vs the command not being found in the current layer. Internally, we store explicitly unbound names/key-chords as `ShortcutAction::Invalid` commands. However, we return `nullptr` when a query points to an unbound command. This is done to hide this complexity away from any caller.
The command palette still needs special handling for nested and iterable commands. Thankfully, the expansion of iterable commands is performed on an `IMapView`, so we can just expose `NameMap` as a consolidation of `ActionMap`'s `NameMap` with its parents. The same can be said for exposing key chords in nested commands.
## Validation Steps Performed
All local tests pass.
Implement dropdown menu for choosing a default terminal application from inside the Windows Terminal Settings UI
## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes#9463
* [x] I work here.
* [x] Manual tests passed
* [x] https://github.com/MicrosoftDocs/terminal/issues/314 (and cross reference #9462)
## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments
- Adds dropdown menu and a template card for displaying the available default applications (using the same lookup code as the console property sheet `console.dll`)
- Adds model to TSM for adapting the data for display and binding on XAML
- Lookup occurs on every page reload. Persistence only happens on Save Changes.
- Manifest changed for Terminal to add capability to opt-out of registry redirection so we can edit this setting
## Validation Steps Performed
- [x] Flipped the menu and pressed Save Changes and launched cmd from run box... it moved between the two.
- [x] Flipped system theme from light to dark and ensured secondary color looked good
- [x] Flipped the status with a different mechanism (conhost propsheet) and then reopened settings page and confirmed it loaded the updated status
## Summary of the Pull Request
I came across a few build system bug fixes, which served their purpose now that VS 16.9 has been released.
## PR Checklist
* [x] I work here
* [x] Project still compiles
This commit moves us to the Xaml prerelease (201202003) that is
equivalent to public stable release 2.5.
Remember, we need to use prereleases for some silly reason.
C++/WinRT added a feature where it will detect a mismatch in some of its
build flags.
Because we build XAML projects and non-XAML projects, and try to link
them together in static libraries, we need those flags to always match.
C++/WinRT only respects this flag when `DEBUG` is set, so our CI missed
this.
With thanks to @carlos-zamora for letting me build/test/commit this on
his computer.
This commit fixes our longstanding build artifact output issues and
finally unifies all C++ project output into bin/ and obj/.
In light of that, I've removed NoOutputRedirection.
I've also updated WTU and U8U16Test to use our common build props and
fixed any warnings/compilation errors that popped out.
I validated this change by running repeated incremental builds after
changing individual .cpp files in many of our C++/WinRT projects.
Introduces a new TerminalSettingsModel (TSM) project. This project is
responsible for (de)serializing and exposing Windows Terminal's settings
as WinRT objects.
## References
#885: TSM epic
#1564: Settings UI is dependent on this for data binding and settings access
#6904: TSM Spec
In the process of ripping out TSM from TerminalApp, a few other changes
were made to make this possible:
1. AppLogic's `ApplicationDisplayName` and `ApplicationVersion` was
moved to `CascadiaSettings`
- These are defined as static functions. They also no longer check if
`AppLogic::Current()` is nullptr.
2. `enum LaunchMode` was moved from TerminalApp to TSM
3. `AzureConnectionType` and `TelnetConnectionType` were moved from the
profile generators to their respective TerminalConnections
4. CascadiaSettings' `SettingsPath` and `DefaultSettingsPath` are
exposed as `hstring` instead of `std::filesystem::path`
5. `Command::ExpandCommands()` was exposed via the IDL
- This required some of the warnings to be saved to an `IVector`
instead of `std::vector`, among some other small changes.
6. The localization resources had to be split into two halves.
- Resource file linked in init.cpp. Verified at runtime thanks to the
StaticResourceLoader.
7. Added constructors to some `ActionArgs`
8. Utils.h/cpp were moved to `cascadia/inc`. `JsonKey()` was moved to
`JsonUtils`. Both TermApp and TSM need access to Utils.h/cpp.
A large amount of work includes moving to the new namespace
(`TerminalApp` --> `Microsoft::Terminal::Settings::Model`).
Fixing the tests had its own complications. Testing required us to split
up TSM into a DLL and LIB, similar to TermApp. Discussion on creating a
non-local test variant can be found in #7743.
Closes#885
The easiest fix was actually just moving all the source files from
`TerminalApp` to `TerminalApp/lib`, where the appropriate `pch.h`
actually resides.
Closes#6866
See: https://github.com/microsoft/microsoft-ui-xaml/releases/tag/v2.5.0-prerelease.200609001
> ### Notable Changes:
>
> Resize tab view items only once the pointer has left the TabViewItem strip (microsoft/microsoft-ui-xaml#2569)
> Align TabView visuals with Edge (microsoft/microsoft-ui-xaml#2201)
> Fix background of MenuFlyout in white high contrast (microsoft/microsoft-ui-xaml#2446)
> TabView: Make TabViewItem consume the TabViewItemHeaderForeground theme resource (microsoft/microsoft-ui-xaml#2348)
> TabView: Add tooltips to its scrolling buttons. (microsoft/microsoft-ui-xaml#2369)
* [x] Related to #5360 (@jtippet confirms that this alone does not close it.)
* [x] I work here
Read the [JsonUtils Spec] for more details.
This pull request introduces the next version of JsonUtils. It is in a
separate file for ease of review and testing.
JsonUtilsNew will be renamed in a subsequent commit that rewrites our
JSON deserializers.
### Implementer's Notes
I went with telescoping exceptions for the key parsing code, because
it's totally possible that you can be five keys deep and encounter a
type error. This lets us encode information about all failures in the
chain instead of just the topmost one.
The original JsonUtilsNew code changed to use `decay` everywhere because
the tests wouldn't compile. We want to treat `GetValue<const guid>` _the
same as_ `GetValue<guid>`, and this lets us do so. `decay` is awesome.
I've been developing this with a shim that redirects `JsonUtils.h` to
`JsonUtilsNew.h`. I am not comfortable deleting the original until we've
moved off of it, and that _will_ be the subject of a followup PR.
## Validation Steps Performed
So many tests.
[JsonUtils Spec]: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/blob/master/doc/cascadia/Json-Utility-API.md
Refs #2550
This brings support for "Compact" tab sizing, which compresses all inactive tabs to just the size of their icons plus the close button. Neat!
It also just keeps us generally up-to-date and good citizens.
This commit introduces a context menu for Tab and a new item,
"Color...", which will display a color picker.
A flyout menu, containing a custom flyout, is attached to each tab. The
flyout displays a palette of 16 preset colors and includes a color
picker. When the user selects or clears color, an event is fired, which
is intercepted by the tab to which the flyout belongs.
The changing of the color is achieved by putting the selected color in
the resource dictionary of the tab, using well-defined dictionary keys
(e.g. TabViewItemHeaderBackground). Afterwards the visual state of the
tab is toggled, so that the color change is visible immediately.
Custom-colored tabs will be desaturated (somewhat) by alpha blending
them with the tab bar background.
The flyout menu also contains a 'Close' flyout item.
## Validation Steps Performed
I've validated the behavior manually: start the program via the start
menu. Right click on the tab -> Choose a tab color.
The color flyout is going to be shown. Click a color swatch or click
'Select a custom color' to use the color picker. Use the 'Clear the
current color' to remove the custom color.
Closes#2994. References #3327.
## Summary of the Pull Request
This latest MUX prerelease fixes the issue where the tab row wouldn't expand to fill the width of the window after shrinking the window size.
## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes#3300
* [x] I work here
* [n/a] Tests added/passed
* [n/a] Requires documentation to be updated
## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments
Thanks again @teaP for help fixing this
## Validation Steps Performed
Launched the terminal, played with it a bit
## Summary of the Pull Request
Updates MUX to the latest pre-release version. This prerelease has a fix for a certain `E_LAYOUTCYCLE` bug in the TabView that was causing an untold number of crashes for us.
Thanks again @teaP!
## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes#3303
* [x] Closes#2277
* [x] I work here
* [n/a] Tests added/passed
* [n/a] Requires documentation to be updated
This commit cleans up and deduplicates all of the common build
preamble/postamble across exe, dll, lib and c++/winrt projects.
The following specific changes have been made:
* All projects now define their ConfigurationType
* All projects now set all their properties *before* including a common
build file (or any other build files)
* cppwinrt.pre and cppwinrt.post now delegate most of their
configuration to common.pre and common.post
* (becuase of the above,) all build options are conserved between
console and c++/winrt components, including specific warnings and
preprocessor definitions.
* More properties that are configurable per-project are now
conditioned so the common props don't override them.
* The exe, dll, exe.or.dll, and lib postincludes have been merged into
pre or post and switched based on condition as required
* Shared items (-shared, -common) are now explicitly vcxitems instead of
vcxproj files.
* The link line is now manipulated after Microsoft.Cpp sets it, so the
libraries we specify "win". All console things link first against
onecore_apiset.lib.
* Fix all compilation errors caused by build unification
* Move CascadiaPackage's resources into a separate item file
Fixes#922.
Due to a platform issue, elevated application packages occasionally fail
to find all of their dependencies. The real fix for this is going to
take a lot of time and probably a new build of Windows.
The fix we have here switches us to a non-"release" build of
Microsoft.UI.Xaml. The critical thing about their non-release builds is
that they prefer to embed their DLLs into the hosting package instead of
expressing a platform dependency.
This build of Microsoft.UI.Xaml was produced from the same commit as
the original and official build; the only difference is that it will
embed into our package.
Fixes#3275.
* We had to move to the final API:
* Items -> TabItems
* Items.VectorChanged -> TabItemsChanged
* TabClose -> TabCloseRequested
* TabViewItem.Icon -> TabViewItem.IconSource
* TabRowControl has been converted to a ContentPresenter, which
simplifies its logic a little bit.
* TerminalPage now differentiates MUX and WUX a little better
* Because of the change from Icon to IconSource in TabViewItem,
Utils::GetColoredIcon needed to be augmented to support MUX IconSources.
It was still necessary to use for WUX, so it's been templatized.
* I moved us from WUX SplitButton to MUX SplitButton and brought the
style in line with the one typically provided by TabView.
* Some of our local controls have had their backgrounds removed so
they're more amenable to being placed on other surfaces.
* I'm suppressing the TabView's padding.
* I removed a number of apparently dead methods from App.
* I've simplified the dragbar's sizing logic and eventing.
* The winmd harvester needed to be taught to not try to copy winmds for
framework packages.
* We now only initialize the terminal once we know the size
Closes#1896.
Closes#444.
Closes#857.
Closes#771.
Closes#760.
_**This PR targets the #2515 PR**_. It does that for the sake of diffing. When this PR and #2515 are both ready, I'll merge #2515 first, then change the target of this branch, and merge this one.
<!-- Enter a brief description/summary of your PR here. What does it fix/what does it change/how was it tested (even manually, if necessary)? -->
## Summary of the Pull Request
This PR adds support for "dynamic profiles", in accordance with the [Cascading Settings Spec](https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/blob/master/doc/cascadia/Cascading-Default-Settings.md#dynamic-profiles). Currently, we have three types of default profiles that fit the category of dynamic profile generators. These are profiles that we want to create on behalf of the user, but require runtime information to be able to create correctly. Because they require runtime information, we can't ship a static version of these profiles as a part of `defaults.json`. These three profile generators are:
* The Powershell Core generator
* The WSL Distro generator
* The Azure Cloud Shell generator
<!-- Other than the issue solved, is this relevant to any other issues/existing PRs? -->
## References
<!-- Please review the items on the PR checklist before submitting-->
## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes#754
* [x] I work here
* [x] look at all these **Tests**
* [x] Requires documentation to be updated - This is done as part of the parent PR
<!-- Provide a more detailed description of the PR, other things fixed or any additional comments/features here -->
## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments
We want to be able to enable the user to edit dynamic profiles that are generated from DPGs. When dynamic profiles are added, we'll add entries for them to the user's `profiles.json`. We do this _without re-serializing_ the settings. Instead, we insert a partial serialization for the profile into the user's settings.
### Remaining TODOs:
* Make sure that dynamic profiles appear in the right place in the order of profiles -> #2722
* [x] don't serialize the `colorTable` key for dynamic profiles.
* [x] re-parse the user settings string if we've changed it.
* Handle changing the default profile to pwsh if it exists on first launch, or file a follow-up issue -> #2721
<!-- Describe how you validated the behavior. Add automated tests wherever possible, but list manual validation steps taken as well -->
## Validation Steps Performed
<hr>
* Create profiles by layering them
* Update test to layer multiple times on the same profile
* Add support for layering an array of profiles, but break a couple tests
* Add a defaults.json to the package
* Layer colorschemes
* Moves tests into individual classes
* adds support for layering a colorscheme on top of another
* Layer an array of color schemes
* oh no, this was missed with #2481
must have committed without staging this change, uh oh. Not like those tests actually work so nbd
* Layer keybindings
* Read settings from defaults.json + profiles.json, layer appropriately
This is like 80% of #754. Needs tests.
* Add tests for keybindings
* add support to unbind a key with `null` or `"unbound"` or `"garbage"`
* Layer or clear optional properties
* Add a helper to get an optional variable for a bunch of different types
In the end, I think we need to ask _was this worth it_
* Do this with the stretch mode too
* Add back in the GUID check for profiles
* Add some tests for global settings layering
* M A D W I T H P O W E R
Add a MsBuild target to auto-generate a header with the defaults.json as a
string in the file. That way, we can _always_ load the defaults. Literally impossible to not.
* When the user's profile.json doesn't exist, create it from a template
* Re-order profiles to match the order set in the user's profiles.json
* Add tests for re-ordering profiles to match user ordering
* Add support for hiding profiles using `"hidden": true`
* Use the hardcoded defaults.json for the exception->"use defaults" case
* Somehow I messed up the git submodules?
* woo documentation
* Fix a Terminal.App.Unit.Tests failure
* signed/unsigned is hard
* Use Alt+Settings button to open the default settings
* Missed a signed/unsigned
* Start dynamically creating profiles
* Give the inbox generators a namespace
and generally hack this a lot less
* Some very preliminary PR feedback
* More PR feedback
Use the wil helper for the exe path
Move jsonutils into their own file
kill some dead code
* Add templates to these bois
* remove some code for generating defaults, reorder defaults.json a tad
* Make guid a std::optional
* Large block of PR feedback
* Remove some dead code
* add some comments
* tag some todos
* stl is love, stl is life
* Serialize the source key
* Make the Azure cloud shell a dynamic profile
* Make the built-in namespaces public
* Add a mechanism for quick-diffing a profile
This will be used to generate the json snippets for dynamically generated profiles.
* Generate partial serializations of dynamic profiles _not_ in the user settings
* Start writing tests for generating dyn profiles
* dyn profiles generate GUIDs based on _source
* we won't run DPGs when they'd disabled?
* Add more DPG tests - TestDontRunDisabledGenerators
* Don't layer profiles with a source that's also different
* Add another test, DoLayerUserProfilesOnDynamicsWhenSourceMatches
* Actually insert new dynamic profiles into the file
* Minor cleanup of `Profile::ShouldBeLayered`
* Migrate legacy profiles gracefully
* using namespace winrt::Windows::UI::Xaml;
* _Only_ layer dynamic profiles from user settings, never create
* Write a test for migrating dynamic profiles
* Comments for dayssssss
* add `-noprofile`
* Fix the crash that dustin found
* -Encoding ASCII
* Set a profile's default scheme to Campbell
* Fix the tests I regressed
* Update UsingJsonSetting.md to reflect that changes from these PRs
* Change how GenerateGuidForProfile works
* Make AppKeyBindings do its own serialization
* Remove leftover dead code from the previous commit
* Fix up an enormous number of PR nits
* Don't layer a profile if the json doesn't have a GUID
* Fix a test I unfixed
* get rid of extraneous bois{};
* Piles of PR feedback
* Collection of PR nits
* PR nits
* Fix a typo; Update the defaults to match #2378
* Tiny nits
* In-den-taition!
* Some typos, PR nits
* Fix this broken defaults case
* Apply suggestions from code review
Co-Authored-By: Carlos Zamora <carlos.zamora@microsoft.com>
* PR nits
In #1164 we learned that our CI doesn't support WinRT testing. This made us all sad. Since that merged, we haven't really added any TerminalApp tests, because it's a little too hard. You'd have to uncomment the entire file, and if the list of types changed you'd have to manually update the sxs manifest and appxmanifest.
Since that was all insane, I created a new Terminal App unittesting project without those problems.
1. The project is not named *Unit*Test*, so the CI won't run it, but it will run locally.
2. The project will auto-generate its SxS manifest, using the work from #1987.
3. We'll use the SxS manifest from step 2 to generate an AppxManifest for running packaged tests.
* This is the start of me trying to enable local unittesting again
* We've got a new unittests project that isn't named *unit*test*
* We're manually generating the SxS manifest for it. B/C we need to use it at runtime, we need to manually combine it into one manifest file
* the runas:UAP thing still doesn't work. We'll investigate.
* This shockingly works
but I'm still stuck with:
```
Summary of Errors Outside of Tests:
Error: TAEF: [HRESULT: 0x80270254] Failed to create the test host process for
out of process test execution. (The
IApplicationActivationManager::ActivateApplication call failed while using a
default host. TAEF's ETW logs which are gathered with the /enableEtwLogging
switch should contain events from relevant providers that may help to diagnose
the failure.)
```
* Cleaning this all up for review.
Frankly just pushing to see if it'll work in CI
* Couple things I noticed in the diff from master
* Apply @dhowett-msft's suggestions from code review
* Refactors TerminalApp into two projects:
- TerminalAppLib, which builds a .lib, and includes all the code
- TerminalApp, which builds a dll by linking the lib
* Adds a TerminalApp.Unit.Tests project
- Includes the ability to test cppwinrt types we've authored using a SxS manifest for unpackaged winrt activation
- includes the ability to test types with XAML content using an appxmanifest
* Adds a giant doc explaining how this was all done. Really, just go read that doc, it'll really help you understand what's going on in this PR.
-------------------------
These are some previous commit messages. They may be helpful to future readers.
* Start adding unittests for json parsing, end up creating a TerminalAppLib project to make a lib. See #1042
* VS automatically did this for me
* This is a dead end
I tried including the idl-y things into the lib, but that way leads insanity
If you want to make a StaticLibrary, then suddenly the winrt toolchain forgets
that ProjectReferences can have winmd's in them, so it won't be able to
compile any types from the referenced projects. If you instead try to manually
reference the types, you'll get duplicate types up the wazoo, which of course
is insane, since we're referencing them the _one_ time
* Yea just follow #1042 on github for status
So current state:
1. If you try to add a `Reference` to all of MUX.Markup, TerminalControl and
TerminalSettings, then mdmerge will complain about all the types from
TerminalSettings being defined twice. In this magic scenario, the
dependencies of TerminalControl are used directly for some reason:
```
12> Load input metadata file ...OpenConsole\x64\Debug\TerminalSettings\Microsoft.Terminal.Settings.winmd.
12> Load input metadata file ...OpenConsole\x64\Debug\TerminalControl\Microsoft.Terminal.Settings.winmd.
12> Load input metadata file ...OpenConsole\x64\Debug\TerminalControl\Microsoft.Terminal.TerminalConnection.winmd.
12> Load input metadata file ...OpenConsole\x64\Debug\TerminalControl\Microsoft.Terminal.TerminalControl.winmd.
12> Load input metadata file ...OpenConsole\x64\Debug\Microsoft.UI.Xaml.Markup\Microsoft.UI.Xaml.Markup.winmd.
```
2. If you don't add a `Reference` TerminalControl, then it'll complain about
being unable to find the type TitleChangedEventArgs, which is defined in
TerminalControl.
3. If you don't add a `Reference` TerminalSettings, then it'll complain about
being unable to find the type KeyChord and other types from
TerminalSettings. In this scenario, it doesn't recurse on the other
dependencies from TerminalControl for whatever reason.
4. If you instead try to add all 3 as a `ProjectReference`, then it'll
complain about being unable to find TitleChangedEventArgs, as in 2.
Presumably, it;ll have troubles with the other types too, as none of the 3
are actually included in the midlrt.rsp file.
5. If you add all 3 as a `ProjectReference`, then also add TerminalControl as
a `Reference`, you'll get a `MIDL2011: [msg] unresolved type declaration
Microsoft.UI.Xaml.Markup.XamlApplication`
6. If you add all 3 as a `ProjectReference`, then also add TerminalControl AND
MUX.Markup as a `Reference`, you'll get the same result as 3.
* what if we just don't idl
This seems to compile
* This compiles but I broke the MUX resources
look at the App.xaml change. in this changelist. That's what's broken right now. Lets fix that!
* lets do this
If I leave the MUX nuget out of the project, I'll get a compile error in
App.xaml:
```
...OpenConsole\src\cascadia\TerminalApp\App.xaml(21,40): XamlCompiler error WMC0001: Unknown type 'XamlControlsResources' in XML namespace 'using:Microsoft.UI.Xaml.Controls'
```
If I add it back to the project, it works
* Some cleanup from the previous commit
* This is busted again.
Doing a clean build didn't work.
A clean rebuild of the project, paired with some removal of dead code
revealed a problem with what I have so far.
TerminalAppLib depends on the generation of two headers,
`AppKeyBindings.g.h` and `App.g.h`, as those define some of bits of the
winrt types. They're needed to be able to compile the implementations.
Presumably that's not getting generated by the lib project, because the dll
project is the one to generate that file.
So we need to move the idl's to the lib project. This created maddness,
because of course the Duplicate Type thing. The solution to that is to
actually mark the winrt DLLs that we're chaining up through us as
```
<Private>false</Private>
<CopyLocalSatelliteAssemblies>false</CopyLocalSatelliteAssemblies>
```
This will prevent them from getting double-included.
This still doesn't work however, since
```
app.cpp(40): error C2039: 'XamlMetaDataProvider': is not a member of 'winrt::TerminalApp'
error C3861: 'XamlMetaDataProvider': identifier not found
```
So we need to figure that out. The dll project is still generating the right
header, so lets look there.
* Move the xaml stuff to the lib
This compiles, but when we launch, we fail to load the tabviewcontrol
resources again. So that's not what you want. Why is it not included?
* It works again!
* Use the pri, xbf files from TerminalAppLib, not TerminalApp
* Manually make TerminalApp include a reference to TerminalAppLib's
TerminalApp.winmd. This will force the build to copy TerminalApp.winmd to
TerminalApp/, which WindowsTerminal needs to be able to ProjectReference the
TerminalApp project (it's expecting it to have a winmd)
* Remove the module.g.cpp from TerminalApp, and move to TerminalAppLib. The
dll doesn't do any codegen anymore.
* Agressively clean up these files
* Clean up unnecessary includes in the dll pch.h
* This does NOT work.
The WindowsxamlManager call crashes. I'm thinking it has to do with activation
of winrt types from a dll.
Email out to @Austin-Lamb to see if he can assist
* This gets our cppwinrt types working, but xaml islands is still broken
* Split the tests apart, so they aren't insane
* These are the magic words to make xaml islands work
* All this witchcraft is necessary to make XAML+MUX work right
* Clean this up a bit and add comments
* Create an enormous doc explaining this madness
* Unsure how this got changed.
* Trying to get the CI build to work again.
This resolves the MUX issue. We need to manually include it, because their package's target doesn't mark it as CopyLocalSatelliteAssemblies=false, Private=false.
However, the TerminalApp project is still able to magically reason that the TerminalAppLib project should be included in the MdMerge step, because it think's it's a `GetCppWinRTStaticProjectReferences` reference.
* Update cppwinrt to the latest version - this fixes the MSBuild
* I still need to re-add the KeyModifiers checks from TermControl. I think
this update broke `operator&` for that enum.
* There needs to be some cleanup obviously
* The doc should be updated as well
* Clean up changes from cppwinrt update
* Try doing this, even though it seems wrong
* Lets try this (press x to doubt)
* Clean up vcxproj file, and remove appxmanifest change from previous commit
* Update to the latest TAEF release, maybe that'll work
* Let's try a prerelease version, shall we?
* Add notes about TAEF package, comment out tests
* Format the code
* Hopefully fix the arm64 and x86 builds
also a typo
* Fix PR nits
* Fix some bad merge conflicts
* Some cleanup from the merge
* Well I was close to getting the merge right
* I believe this will fix CI
* Apply suggestions from code review
Co-Authored-By: Carlos Zamora <carlos.zamora@microsoft.com>
* These definitely need to be fixed
* Try version detecting in the test
IDK if this will build, I'm letting the CI try while I clean rebuild locally
* Try blindly updating to the newest nuget version
* Revert "Try blindly updating to the newest nuget version"
This reverts commit b72bd9eb73.
* We're just going to see if these work in CI with this change
* Comment the tests back out. Windows Server 2019 is 10.0.17763.557
* Remove the nuget package
We don't need this package anymore now that we're hosting it
* Okay this _was_ important