This commit iontroduces another `target` to the `openSettings` binding:
`settingsUI`. It opens the settings UI introduced in the previous
commit.
Closes#1564Closes#8048 (PR)
Co-authored-by: Carlos Zamora <carlos.zamora@microsoft.com>
Co-authored-by: Leon Liang <lelian@microsoft.com>
Adds a "move to previous pane" and "move to next pane" keybinding, which
navigates to the last/first focused pane
We assign pane IDs on creation and maintain a vector of active pane IDs
in MRU order. Navigating panes by MRU then requires specifying which
pane ID we want to focus.
From our offline discussion (thanks @zadjii-msft for the concise
description):
> For the record, the full spec I'm imagining is:
>
> { command": { "action": "focus(Next|Prev)Pane", "order": "inOrder"|"mru", "useSwitcher": true|false } },
>
> and order defaults to mru, and useSwitcher will default to true, when
> there is a switcher. So
>
> { command": { "action": "focusNextPane" } },
> { command": { "action": "focusNextPane", "order": "mru" } },
>
> these are the same action. (but right now we don't support the order
> param)
>
> Then there'll be another PR for "focusPane(target=id)"
>
> Then a third PR for "focus(Next|Prev)Pane(order=inOrder)"
> for the record, I prefer this approach over the "one action to rule
> them all" version with both target and order/direction as params,
> because I don't like the confusion of what happens if there's both
> target and order/direction provided.
References #1000Closes#2871
There's a handful of small changes in these updates:
The Win32 Toolkit is now built with CFG (I think), and
the VCRT forwarders are now the (second) non-RC version.
First step towards #8415:
* Introduce `PaletteItem` and derive from it to provide native support
for tabs and command lines (`ActionPaletteItem` / `TabPaletteItem`,
`CommandLinePaltteItem`)
* Remove business logic behind PaletteItem from palette (aka dispatch
commands and preview tabs externally)
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.
* Add a tabColor parameter to the `new-tab` and `split-panes` command
* Add --tabColor to the command line, to allow bootstrapping with tabs
of different colors
Add another field to NewTerminalArgs. Use this field to set
StartingTabColor in Terminal. This color gets overridden by the color
defined by the profile / VT, however can be overridden with the color
picker.
Since the color is the property of the Terminal, when defined for the
tab this color is associated only with the first pane/terminal of the
tab. Additional panes will not inherit this color (to prevent advanced
resolution, where we need to resolve between the inherited color and the
one specified for the pane).
## Validation Steps Performed
* UT for parameters parsing
* Running system with several tabs of different colors.
* Adding custom actions with colors
* Performing operations like split pane, duplicate and so on
Closes#8075
Currently when implicit tab command is specified (i.e., we have
parameters for new-tab, but don't have the explicit subcommand name) we
fallback to parsing the entire arg list as new tab command.
However, if we also have a launch profile (or anything else that might in
the future belong to the upper scope) it is passed as a parameter to the
new tab command, failing the parsing.
The idea behind my solution is to run the parser as a prefix command -
i.e., as long as we succeed to parse [options] / [subcommand] we will
parse them (populating the fields like a launch mode), but once we will
discover something unfamiliar, like profile, we will know that the
prefix is over and will handle the remaining suffix as a new tab
command.
## Validation Steps Performed
* UT added
* Manual run of different options
Closes#7318
In introduced a bug in #8185, due to which Command Palette sorts items
alphabetically in the tab switcher mode. This PR fixes it.
Validation:
Created tabs with different names and verified that the MRU order is
preserved
Closes#8185
By adding these target Inputs/Outputs to TestHostApp's AfterBuild, we
can ensure that new versions of the test libraries are properly
detected. No longer will we have to delete them from disk and rebuild
TestHostApp and hope that it picks up the latest test binaries.
Oh, and I turned on a couple other optimizations (hard links, skipping
unchanged files) that were really just low-hanging fruit.
* Created a ViewModel class in the Command Palette called
FilteredCommand, aggregating the Command, the filter and the
highlighted presentation of the command name
* This ListView of the filtered commands is bound to the vector of
FilteredCommands
* Introduced HighlightedTextControl user control with HighlightedText
view model
* Added this control to the ListView Item's grid
* Bound the FilteredCommand's highlighted command name to the user
control
## Validation Steps Performed
* UT for matching algorithm
* Only manual tests
* Searching in CommandLine, SwitchTab and Nested Command modes
* Checking for bot matching an non matching filters
* Dogfooding
Closes#6646
## Summary of the Pull Request
Changes the way the `useTabSwitcher` setting works. It now accepts either a boolean or a string:
* `true`, `"mru"`: Use the tab switcher with MRU tab switching
* `"inOrder"`: Use the tab switcher, with in-order tab switching
* `false`, `"disabled"`: Don't use the tab switcher. Tabs will switch in-order.
This is following the discussion chronicled in #8025, as well as the follow-up investigation in that thread.
## References
* #7952 introduced MRU tab switching
## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes#8025 - there's also discussion of using a parameter in an action to override this setting, but that should get punted to a follow-up task
* [x] I work here
* [x] Tests added/passed - YOU BET THEY WERE
* [ ] Requires documentation to be updated
## Validation Steps Performed
I've been switching tabs all day and all night, with different settings values, and hot-reloading the setting.
I also _ran the test_ I added.
In preparation for the Settings UI, we needed to make some changes to
Tab to abstract out shared, common functionality between different types
of tab. This is the result of that work. All code references to the
settings have been removed or reverted.
Contains changes from #8053, #7802.
The messages below only make sense in the context of the Settings UI,
which this pull request does not bring in. They do, however, provide
valuable information.
From #7802 (@leonMSFT):
> This PR's goal was to add an option to the `OpenSettings` keybinding to
> open the Settings UI in a tab. In order to implement that, a couple of
> changes had to be made to `Tab`, specifically:
>
> - Introduce a tab interface named `ITab`
> - Create/Rename two new Tab classes that implement `ITab` called
> `SettingsTab` and `TerminalTab`
>
From #8053:
> `TerminalTab` and `SettingsTab` share some implementation details. The
> close submenu introduced in #7728 is a good example of functionality
> that is consistent across all tabs. This PR transforms `ITab` from an
> interface, into an [unsealed runtime class] to de-duplicate some
> functionality. Most of the logic from `SettingsTab` was moved there
> because I expect the default behavior of a tab to resemble the
> `SettingsTab` over a `TerminalTab`.
>
> ## References
> Verified that Close submenu work was transferred over (#7728, #7961, #8010).
>
> ## Validation Steps Performed
> Check close submenu on first/last tab when multiple tabs are open.
>
> Closes#7969
>
> [unsealed runtime class]: https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/uwp/midl-3/intro#base-classes
Co-authored-by: Carlos Zamora <carlos.zamora@microsoft.com>
Co-authored-by: Leon Liang <lelian@microsoft.com>
Co-authored-by: Carlos Zamora <carlos.zamora@microsoft.com>
## Summary of the Pull Request
This PR replaces `CascadiaSettings::_profiles` with...
- `_allProfiles`: the list of all available profiles in the settings model (i.e. settings.json, dynamic profiles, etc...)
- `_activeProfiles`: the list of all non-hidden profiles (used for the new tab dropdown)
## References
#8018: maintaining a list of all profiles allows us to serialize hidden profiles
#1564: Settings UI can link to `AllProfiles()` instead of `ActiveProfiles()` to expose hidden profiles
## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes#4139
* [x] Tests added/passed
## Validation Steps Performed
Deploy and testing succeeded
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.
## Summary of the Pull Request
Introduces `IInheritable` as an interface that helps move cascading settings into the Terminal Settings Model. `GlobalAppSettings` and `Profile` both are now `IInheritable`. `CascadiaSettings` was updated to `CreateChild()` for globals and each profile when we are loading the JSON data.
IInheritable does most of the heavy lifting. It introduces a two new macros and the interface. The macros help implement the fallback functionality for nullable and non-nullable settings.
## References
#7876 - Spec Addendum
#6904 - TSM Spec
#1564 - Settings UI
#7876 - `Copy()` needs to be updated to include _parent
## Summary of the Pull Request
Fixes the bug where `exit`ing inside a closed pane would leave the Terminal blank.
Additionally, removes `Tab::GetRootElement` and replaces it with the _observable_ `Tab::Content`. This should be more resilient in the future.
Also adds some tests, though admittedly not for this exact scenario. This scenario requires a cooperating TerminalConnection that I can drive for the sake of testing, and _ain't nobody got time for that_.
## References
* Introduced in #6989
## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes#7252
* [x] I work here
* [x] Tests added/passed 🎉
* [n/a] Requires documentation to be updated
## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments
From notes I had left in `Tab.cpp` while I was working on this:
```
OKAY I see what's happening here the ActivePaneChanged Handler in TerminalPage
doesn't re-attach the tab content to the tree, it just updates the title of the
window.
So when the pane is `exit`ed, the pane's control is removed and re-attached to
the parent grid, which _isn't in the XAML tree_. And no one can go tell the
TerminalPage that it needs to re set up the tab content again.
The Page _manually_ does this in a few places, when various pane actions are
about to take place, it'll unzoom. It would be way easier if the Tab could just
manage the content of the page.
Or if the Tab just had a Content that was observable, that when that changed,
the page would auto readjust. That does sound like a LOT of work though.
```
## Validation Steps Performed
Opened panes, closed panes, exited panes, zoomed panes, moved focus between panes, panes, panes, panes
This commit introduces two new launch modes: focus and maximizedFocus.
* Focused mode, behaves like a default mode, but with the Focus Mode
enabled.
* Maximized focused mode, behaves like a Maximized mode, but with the
Focus Mode enabled.
There two ways to invoke these new modes:
* In the settings file: you set the "launchMode" to either "focus" or
"maximizedFocus"
* In the command line options, you can path -f / --focus, which is
mutually exclusive with the --fullscreen, but can be combined with the
--maximized:
* Passing -f / --focus will launch the terminal in the "focus" mode
* Passing -fM / --focus --maximized will launch the terminal in the
"maximizedFocus" mode
This should resolve a relevant part in the command line arguments
mega-thread #4632Closes#7124Closes#7825Closes#7875
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
Add `ToJson()` to the `ConversionTrait`s in JsonUtils. This can be used
to serialize settings objects into JSON.
As a proof of concept, `ToJson` and `UpdateJson` were added to
`ColorScheme`.
Getters and setters for members and colors in the color table were added
and polished.
## References
#1564 - Settings UI
`ColorScheme` is a particularly easy example of serialization because it
has _no fallback_.
Added a few tests for JSON serializers.
`KeyMapping` was introduced to break up `AppKeyBindings`. `KeyMapping`
records the keybindings from the JSON and lets you query them.
`AppKeyBindings` now just holds a `ShortcutActionDispatcher` to run
actions, and a `KeyMapping` to record/query your existing keybindings.
This refactor allows `KeyMapping` to be moved to the
TerminalSettingsModel, and `ShortcutActionDispatcher` and
`AppKeyBindings` will stay in TerminalApp.
`AppKeyBindings` had to be passed down to a terminal via
`TerminalSettings`. Since each settings object had its own
responsibility to update/create a `TerminalSettings` object, I moved all
of that logic to `TerminalSettings`. This helps with the
TerminalSettingsModel refactor, and makes the construction of
`TerminalSettings` a bit cleaner and more centralized.
## References
#885 - this is all in preparation for the TerminalSettingsModel
## Validation Steps Performed
- [x] Tests passed
- [X] Deployment succeeded
Now that CascadiaSettings is a WinRT object, we need to update the error
handling a bit. Making it a WinRT object limits our errors to be
hresults. So we moved all the error handling down a layer to when we
load the settings object.
- Warnings encountered during validation are saved to `Warnings()`.
- Errors encountered during validation are saved to `GetLoadingError()`.
- Deserialization errors (mainly from JsonUtils) are saved to
`GetDeserializationErrorMessage()`.
## References
#7141 - CascadiaSettings is a settings object
#885 - this makes ripping out CascadiaSettings into
TerminalSettingsModel much easier
## Validation Steps Performed
* [x] Tests passed
- [x] Deployment succeeded
- tested with invalid JSON (deserialization error)
- tested with missing DefaultProfile (validation error)
CascadiaSettings is now a WinRT object in the TerminalApp project.
## References
#7141 - CascadiaSettings is a settings object
#885 - this new settings object will be moved to a new TerminalSettingsModel project
This one _looks_ big, but most of it is really just propagating the
changes to the tests. In fact, you can probably save yourself some time
because the tests were about an hour of Find&Replace.
`CascadiaSettings::GetCurrentAppSettings()` was only being used in
Pane.cpp. So I ripped out the 3 lines of code and stuffed them in there.
Follow-up work:
- There's a few places in AppLogic where I `get_self` to be able to get
the warnings out. This will go away in the next PR (wrapping up #885)
## Validation Steps Performed
- [x] Tests passed
- [X] Deployment succeeded
Closes#7141
GlobalAppSettings is now a WinRT object in the TerminalApp project.
## References
#7141 - GlobalAppSettings is a settings object
#885 - this new settings object will be moved to a new TerminalSettingsModel project
## PR Checklist
* [x] Tests passed
## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments
This one was probably the easiest thus far.
The only weird thing is how we handle InitialPosition. Today, we lose a
little bit of fidelity when we convert from LaunchPosition (int) -->
Point (float) --> RECT (long). The current change converts
LaunchPosition (optional<long>) --> InitialPosition (long) --> RECT
(long).
NOTE: Though I could use LaunchPosition to go directly from TermApp to
AppHost, I decided to introduce InitialPosition because LaunchPosition
will be a part of TerminalSettingsModel soon.
## Validation Steps Performed
- [x] Tests passed
- [x] Deployment succeeded
Profile is now a WinRT object in the TerminalApp project.
As with ColorScheme, all of the serialization logic is not exposed via
the idl. TerminalSetingsModel will handle it when it's all moved over.
I removed the "Get" and "Set" prefixes from all of the Profile
functions. It just makes more sense to use the `GETSET_PROPERTY` macro
to do most of the work for us.
`CloseOnExitMode` is now an enum off of the Profile.idl.
`std::optional<wstring>` got converted to `hstring` (as opposed to
`IReference<hstring>`). `IReference<hstring>` is not valid to MIDL.
## References
#7141 - Profile is a settings object
#885 - this new settings object will be moved to a new TerminalSettingsModel project
## Validation Steps Performed
- [x] Tests passed
- [x] Deployment succeeded
Closes#7435
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
In #6532, we thought it would be a good idea to add "bindings" as an
overload for "keybindings", as we were no longer going to use the
keybindings array for just keybindings. We were going to add commands.
So we started secretly treating `"bindings"` the same as
`"keybindings"`.
Then, in #7175, we discussed using "actions" as the key for the list of
commands/keybindings/global actions, instead of using "bindings". We're
going to be using this array as the global list of all actions, so it
makes sense to just call it `"actions"`.
This PR renames "bindings" to "actions". Fortunately, we never
documented the "bindings" overload in the first place, so we can get
away with this safely, and preferably before we ship "bindings" for too
long.
References #6899
## Summary of the Pull Request
![cmdpal-set-color-scheme](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/18356694/90517094-8eddd480-e12a-11ea-8be4-8b6782d8d88c.gif)
Allows for creating commands that iterate over the user's color schemes. Also adds a top-level nested command to `defaults.json` that allows the user to select a color scheme (pictured above). I'm not sure there are really any other use cases that make sense, but it _really_ makes sense for this one.
## References
* #5400 - cmdpal megathread
* made possible by #6856, _and support from viewers like you._
* All this is being done in pursuit of #6689
## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes wait what? I could have swore there was an issue for this one...
* [x] I work here
* [x] Tests added/passed
* [ ] Requires documentation to be updated - okay maybe now I'll write some docs
## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments
Most of the hard work for this was already done in #6856. This is just another thing to iterate over.
## Validation Steps Performed
* Played with this default command. It works great.
* Added tests.
Use the Helix testing orchestration framework to run our Terminal LocalTests and Console Host UIA tests.
## References
#### Creates the following new issues:
- #7281 - re-enable local tests that were disabled to turn on Helix
- #7282 - re-enable UIA tests that were disabled to turn on Helix
- #7286 - investigate and implement appropriate compromise solution to how Skipped is handled by MUX Helix scripts
#### Consumes from:
- #7164 - The update to TAEF includes wttlog.dll. The WTT logs are what MUX's Helix scripts use to track the run state, convert to XUnit format, and notify both Helix and AzDO of what's going on.
#### Produces for:
- #671 - Making Terminal UIA tests is now possible
- #6963 - MUX's Helix scripts are already ready to capture PGO data on the Helix machines as certain tests run. Presuming we can author some reasonable scenarios, turning on the Helix environment gets us a good way toward automated PGO.
#### Related:
- #4490 - We lost the AzDO integration of our test data when I moved from the TAEF/VSTest adapter directly back to TE. Thanks to the WTTLog + Helix conversion scripts to XUnit + new upload phase, we have it back!
## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes#3838
* [x] I work here.
* [x] Literally adds tests.
* [ ] Should I update a testing doc in this repo?
* [x] Am core contributor. Hear me roar.
* [ ] Correct spell-checking the right way before merge.
## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments
We have had two classes of tests that don't work in our usual build-machine testing environment:
1. Tests that require interactive UI automation or input injection (a.k.a. require a logged in user)
2. Tests that require the entire Windows Terminal to stand up (because our Xaml Islands dependency requires 1903 or later and the Windows Server instance for the build is based on 1809.)
The Helix testing environment solves both of these and is brought to us by our friends over in https://github.com/microsoft/microsoft-ui-xaml.
This PR takes a large portion of scripts and pipeline configuration steps from the Microsoft-UI-XAML repository and adjusts them for Terminal needs.
You can see the source of most of the files in either https://github.com/microsoft/microsoft-ui-xaml/tree/master/build/Helix or https://github.com/microsoft/microsoft-ui-xaml/tree/master/build/AzurePipelinesTemplates
Some of the modifications in the files include (but are not limited to) reasons like:
- Our test binaries are named differently than MUX's test binaries
- We don't need certain types of testing that MUX does.
- We use C++ and C# tests while MUX was using only C# tests (so the naming pattern and some of the parsing of those names is different e.g. :: separators in C++ and . separators in C#)
- Our pipeline phases work a bit differently than MUX and/or we need significantly fewer pieces to the testing matrix (like we don't test a wide variety of OS versions).
The build now runs in a few stages:
1. The usual build and run of unit tests/feature tests, packaging verification, and whatnot. This phase now also picks up and packs anything required for running tests in Helix into an artifact. (It also unifies the artifact name between the things Helix needs and the existing build outputs into the single `drop` artifact to make life a little easier.)
2. The Helix preparation build runs that picks up those artifacts, generates all the scripts required for Helix to understand the test modules/functions from our existing TAEF tests, packs it all up, and queues it on the Helix pool.
3. Helix generates a VM for our testing environment and runs all the TAEF tests that require it. The orchestrator at helix.dot.net watches over this and tracks the success/fail and progress of each module and function. The scripts from our MUX friends handle installing dependencies, making the system quiet for better reliability, detecting flaky tests and rerunning them, and coordinating all the log uploads (including for the subruns of tests that are re-run.)
4. A final build phase is run to look through the results with the Helix API and clean up the marking of tests that are flaky, link all the screenshots and console output logs into the AzDO tests panel, and other such niceities.
We are set to run Helix tests on the Feature test policy of only x64 for now.
Additionally, because the set up of the Helix VMs takes so long, we are *NOT* running these in PR trigger right now as I believe we all very much value our 15ish minute PR turnaround (and the VM takes another 15 minutes to just get going for whatever reason.) For now, they will only run as a rolling build on master after PRs are merged. We should still know when there's an issue within about an hour of something merging and multiple PRs merging fast will be done on the rolling build as a batch run (not one per).
In addition to setting up the entire Helix testing pipeline for the tests that require it, I've preserved our classic way of running unit and feature tests (that don't require an elaborate environment) directly on the build machines. But with one bonus feature... They now use some of the scripts from MUX to transform their log data and report it to AzDO so it shows up beautifully in the build report. (We used to have this before I removed the MStest/VStest wrapper for performance reasons, but now we can have reporting AND performance!) See https://dev.azure.com/ms/terminal/_build/results?buildId=101654&view=ms.vss-test-web.build-test-results-tab for an example.
I explored running all of the tests on Helix but.... the Helix setup time is long and the resources are more expensive. I felt it was better to preserve the "quick signal" by continuing to run these directly on the build machine (and skipping the more expensive/slow Helix setup if they fail.) It also works well with the split between PR builds not running Helix and the rolling build running Helix. PR builds will get a good chunk of tests for a quick turn around and the rolling build will finish the more thorough job a bit more slowly.
## Validation Steps Performed
- [x] Ran the updated pipelines with Pull Request configuration ensuring that Helix tests don't run in the usual CI
- [x] Ran with simulation of the rolling build to ensure that the tests now running in Helix will pass. All failures marked for follow on in reference issues.
ColorScheme is now a WinRT object.
All of the JSON stuff can't be exposed via the idl. So the plan here is
that we'll have the TerminalSettingsModel project handle all of the
serialization when it's moved over. These functions will be exposed off
of the `implementation` namespace, not projected namespace.
References #7141 - ColorScheme is a settings object
References #885 - this new settings object will be moved to a new
TerminalSettingsModel project
## Validation Steps Performed
- [x] Tests passed
- [x] Deployment succeeded
## Summary of the Pull Request
This PR adds support for both _nested_ and _iterable_ commands in the Command palette.
![nested-commands-000](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/18356694/87072916-2d991c00-c1e2-11ea-8917-a70e8b8b9803.gif)
* **Nested commands**: These are commands that include additional sub-commands. When the user selects on of these, the palette will update to only show the nested commands.
* **Iterable commands**: These are commands what allow the user to define only a single command, which is repeated once for every profile. (in the future, also repeated for color schemes, themes, etc.)
The above gif uses the following json:
```json
{
"name": "Split Pane...",
"commands": [
{
"iterateOn": "profiles",
"name": "Split with ${profile.name}...",
"commands": [
{ "command": { "action": "splitPane", "profile": "${profile.name}", "split": "automatic" } },
{ "command": { "action": "splitPane", "profile": "${profile.name}", "split": "vertical" } },
{ "command": { "action": "splitPane", "profile": "${profile.name}", "split": "horizontal" } }
]
}
]
},
```
## References
## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes#3994
* [x] I work here
* [x] Tests added/passed
* [ ] Requires documentation to be updated - Sure does, but we'll finish polishing this first.
## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments
We've now gotta keep the original json for a command around, so that once we know what all the profiles will be, we can expand the commands that need it.
We've also got to parse commands recursively, because they might have any number of child commands.
These together made the command parsing a _lot_ more complicated, but it feels good so far.
## Validation Steps Performed
* wrote a bunch of tests
* Played with it a bunch
## Summary of the Pull Request
Move `ICoreSettings` and `IControlSettings` from the TerminalSettings project to the TerminalCore and TerminalControl projects respectively. Also entirely removes the TerminalSettings project.
The purpose of these interfaces is unchanged. `ICoreSettings` is used to instantiate a terminal. `IControlSettings` (which requires an `ICoreSettings`) is used to instantiate a UWP terminal control.
## References
Closes#7140
Related Epic: #885
Related Spec: #6904
## PR Checklist
* [X] Closes#7140
* [X] CLA signed
* [X] Tests ~added~/passed (no additional tests necessary)
* [X] ~Documentation updated~
* [X] ~Schema updated~
## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments
A lot of the work here was having to deal with winmd files across all of these projects. The TerminalCore project now outputs a Microsoft.Terminal.TerminalControl.winmd. Some magic happens in TerminalControl.vcxproj to get this to work properly.
## Validation Steps Performed
Deployed Windows Terminal and opened a few new tabs.
Move TerminalSettings object from TerminalSettings project
(Microsoft.Terminal.Settings) to TerminalApp project. `TerminalSettings`
specifically operates as a bridge that exposes any necessary information
to a TerminalControl.
Closes#7139
Related Epic: #885
Related Spec: #6904
## PR Checklist
* [X] Closes#7139
* [X] CLA signed
* [X] Tests ~added~/passed (no additional tests necessary)
* [X] ~Documentation updated~
* [X] ~Schema updated~
## Validation Steps Performed
Deployed Windows Terminal and opened a few new tabs.
Updates TAEF to 10.57.200731005-develop
## PR Checklist
* [x] Helps #6992 by bringing `wttlog.dll` along with the rest of TAEF.
* [x] I work here.
* [x] Automated tests in CI
* [x] No doc/schema update necessary (checked for docs in this repo)
* [x] Am core contributor.
## Summary of the Pull Request
Adds a execute commandline action (`wt`), which lets a user bind a key to a specific `wt` commandline. This commandline will get parsed and run _in the current window_.
## References
* Related to #4472
* Related to #5400 - I need this for the commandline mode of the Command Palette
* Related to #5970
## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes oh, there's not actually an issue for this.
* [x] I work here
* [x] Tests added/passed
* [ ] Requires documentation to be updated - yes it does
## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments
One important part of this change concerns how panes are initialized at runtime. We've had some persistent trouble with initializing multiple panes, because they rely on knowing how big they'll actually be, to be able to determine if they can split again.
We previously worked around this by ignoring the size check when we were in "startup", processing an initial commandline. This PR however requires us to be able to know the initial size of a pane at runtime, but before the parents have necessarily been added to the tree, or had their renderer's set up.
This led to the development of `Pane::PreCalculateCanSplit`, which is very highly similar to `Pane::PreCalculateAutoSplit`. This method attempts to figure out how big a pane _will_ take, before the parent has necessarily laid out.
This also involves a small change to `TermControl`, because if its renderer hasn't been set up yet, it'll always think the font is `{0, fontHeight}`, which will let the Terminal keep splitting in the x direction. This change also makes the TermControl set up a renderer to get the real font size when it hasn't yet been initialized.
## Validation Steps Performed
This was what the json blob I was using for testing evolved into
```json
{
"command": {
"action":"wt",
"commandline": "new-tab cmd.exe /k #work 15 ; split-pane cmd.exe /k #work 15 ; split-pane cmd.exe /k media-commandline ; new-tab powershell dev\\symbols.ps1 ; new-tab -p \"Ubuntu\" ; new-tab -p \"haunter.gif\" ; focus-tab -t 0",
},
"keys": ["ctrl+shift+n"]
}
```
I also added some tests.
# TODO
* [x] Creating a `{ "command": "wt" }` action without a commandline will spawn a new `wt.exe` process?
- Probably should just do nothing for the empty string
This pull request converts the following JSON deserializers to use the
new JSON deserializer pattern:
* Profile
* Command
* ColorScheme
* Action/Args
* GlobalSettings
* CascadiaSettingsSerialization
This is the completion of a long-term JSON refactoring that makes our
parser and deserializer more type-safe and robust. We're finally able to
get rid of all our manual enum conversion code and unify JSON conversion
around _types_ instead of around _keys_.
I've introduced another file filled with template specializations,
TerminalSettingsSerializationHelpers.h, which comprises a single unit
that holds all of the JSON deserializers (and eventually serializers)
for every type that comes from TerminalApp or TerminalSettings.
I've also moved some types out of Profile and GlobalAppSettings into a
new SettingsTypes.h to improve settings locality.
This does to some extent constitute a breaking change for already-broken
settings. Instead of parsing "successfully" (where invalid values are
null or 0 or unknown or unset), deserialization will now fail when
there's a type mismatch. Because of that, some tests had to be removed.
While I was on a refactoring spree, I removed a number of helpless
helpers, like GetWstringFromJson (which converted a u8 string to an
hstring to make a wstring out of its data pointer :|) and
_ConvertJsonToBool.
In the future, we can make the error types more robust and give them
position and type information such that a conformant application can
display rich error information ("line 3 column 3, I expected a string,
you gave me an integer").
Closes#2550.
This adds `nt`, `sp`, and `ft` as aliases for `new-tab`, `split-pane`,
and `focus-tab`, respectively. These do exactly the same thing as their
long for counterparts, but are just shorter, for those of us who type
slower than a fifth grader 👀
Now you can do
```
wt nt cmd.exe /k #work 15 ; sp cmd.exe /k #work 15 ; sp cmd.exe /k
media-commandline ; nt powershell dev\\symbols.ps1 ; nt -p \"Ubuntu\" ;
nt -p \"Ubuntu\" ; ft -t 0
```
instead of
```
new-tab cmd.exe /k #work 15 ; split-pane cmd.exe /k #work 15 ;
split-pane cmd.exe /k media-commandline ; new-tab powershell
dev\\symbols.ps1 ; new-tab -p \"Ubuntu\" ; new-tab -p \"Ubuntu\" ;
focus-tab -t 0
```
The pattern I'm using here is that each of these subcommands now has a
little helper lambda that actually sets up the subcommand with the
required arguments, and we just call that lambda twice, once for the
long-form of the command, and again for the short.
I imagine that in the future, we won't necessarily have short-forms for
every subcommands, so if there are future conflicts we'd have to figure
that out pre-emptively, but these all seem like they'll need a short
form.
Closes#5466
This parameter was added as a workaround for our fast trackpad
scrolling. Since that was fixed before 1.0 shipped, in #4554, it has
been largely vestigial. There is no reason for us to keep it around any
longer.
It was also the only "logic" in TerminalSettings, which is otherwise a
library that only transits data between two other libraries.
I have not removed it from the schema, as I do not want to mark folks'
settings files invalid to a strict schema parser.
While I was in the area, I added support for "scroll one screen at a
time" (which is represented by the API returning WHEEL_PAGESCROLL),
fixing #5610. We were also storing it in an int (whoops) instead of a
uint.
Fixes#5610
The main change in 16.7 is the separation of `AppContainerApplication`
into `WindowsStoreApp` and `WindowsAppContainer`. There's been a bit of
interest in splitting packaging away from containment, and this is the
first step in that direction.
We're a somewhat unique application, but as WinUI3 becomes more
prevalent we will become _less_ unique.
Some of these things, I've looked at and wondered how they ever worked.
## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes nothing
## Validation Steps Performed
Built locally and in CI. Tested the generated package with the package tester. Built on 16.6 and seen that it still seems to work.
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
## Summary of the Pull Request
![command-palette-001](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/18356694/85313480-b6dbef00-b47d-11ea-8a8f-a802d26c2f9b.gif)
This adds a first iteration on the command palette. Notable missing features are:
* Commandline mode: This will be a follow-up PR, following the merge of #6537
* nested and iterable commands: These will additionally be a follow-up PR.
This is also additionally based off the addenda in #6532.
This does not bind a key for the palette by default. That will be done when the above follow-ups are completed.
## References
* #2046 - The original command palette thread
* #5400 - This is the megathread for all command palette issues, which is tracking a bunch of additional follow up work
* #5674 and #6532 - specs
* #6537 - related
## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes#2046
- incidentally also closes#6645
* [x] I work here
* [x] Tests added/passed
* [ ] Requires documentation to be updated - delaying this until it's more polished.
## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments
* There's a lot of code for autogenerating command names. That's all in `ActionArgs.cpp`, because each case is so _not_ boilerplate, unlike the rest of the code in `ActionArgs.h`.
## Validation Steps Performed
* I've been playing with this for months.
* Tests
* Selfhost with the team
## Summary of the Pull Request
Adds a pair of `ShortcutAction`s for setting the tab color.
* `setTabColor`: This changes the color of the current tab to the provided color, or can be used to clear the color.
* `openTabColorPicker`: This keybinding immediately activates the tab color picker for the currently focused tab.
## References
## PR Checklist
* [x] scratches my own itch
* [x] I work here
* [x] Tests added/passed
* [x] https://github.com/MicrosoftDocs/terminal/pull/69
## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments
## Validation Steps Performed
* hey look there are tests
* Tested with the following:
```json
// { "command": "setTabColor", "keys": [ "alt+c" ] },
{ "keys": "ctrl+alt+c", "command": { "action": "setTabColor", "color": "#123456" } },
{ "keys": "alt+shift+c", "command": { "action": "setTabColor", "color": null} },
{ "keys": "alt+c", "command": "openTabColorPicker" },
```
Wildcards are not allowed in toplevel ItemGroups in vcxproj; they must
be generated by targets.
We mostly use wildcards for pulling in PRI files that are dumped on disk
by the translation tool. We don't want to check those in, so we can't
expand references to them.
To that end, I've introduced a new target that will take a list of
folders containing resw files and expand wildcards under them.
All[1] other wildcards have been moved into their respective targets
_or_ simply expanded.
[1]: Nothing has complained about the resource wildcards in
CascadiaResources.build.items, so I haven't exploded it yet.
Fixes#6214.
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.
## Summary of the Pull Request
Adds support for trailing commas in our json files.
## References
* Enabled due to the excellent work over in https://github.com/open-source-parsers/jsoncpp/pull/1098
## PR Checklist
* [x] I work here
* [x] Tests added/passed
* [n/a] Requires documentation to be updated