This implements command line matching for `CascadiaSettings::GetProfileForArgs`.
The command lines for all user profiles are resolved to absolute file paths,
argument quotes are standardized ("canonicalized") and the results are cached.
When `GetProfileForArgs` is called with a Commandline() value, we "canonicalize"
the argument as well and find the profile that is the longest prefix.
If none could be found the default profile is returned.
## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes#9458
* [x] Closes#10952
* [x] I work here
* [ ] Tests added/passed
## Validation Steps Performed
* Open a `cmd.exe` tab in the store-version of WT
* Run `start cmd`
--> A tab with the `cmd.exe` profile opens
* Run `start pwsh.exe`
--> A tab with the PowerShell 7 profile opens
* Run PowerShell 7 from the start menu
--> A tab with the PowerShell 7 profile opens
* Create a symlink for PowerShell 7 and launch `pwsh.exe` from there
--> A tab with the PowerShell 7 profile opens
## Summary of the Pull Request
![clear-buffer-000](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/18356694/127570078-90c6089e-0430-4dfc-bcd4-a0cde20c9167.gif)
This adds a new action, `clearBuffer`. It accepts 3 values for the `clear` type:
* `"clear": "screen"`: Clear the terminal viewport content. Leaves the scrollback untouched. Moves the cursor row to the top of the viewport (unmodified).
* `"clear": "scrollback"`: Clear the scrollback. Leaves the viewport untouched.
* `"clear": "all"`: (**default**) Clear the scrollback and the visible viewport. Moves the cursor row to the top of the viewport (unmodified).
"Clear Buffer" has also been added to `defaults.json`.
## References
* From microsoft/vscode#75141 originally
## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes#1193
* [x] Closes#1882
* [x] I work here
* [x] Tests added/passed
* [ ] Requires documentation to be updated
## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments
This is a bit tricky, because we need to plumb it all the way through conpty to clear the buffer. If we don't, then conpty will immediately just redraw the screen. So this sends a signal to the attached conpty, and then waits for conpty to draw the updated, cleared, screen back to us.
## Validation Steps Performed
* works for each of the three clear types as expected
* tests pass.
* works even with `ping -t 8.8.8.8` as you'd hope.
#### ⚠️ targets #10051
## Summary of the Pull Request
This PR does one big, primary thing. It removes all the constructors from any TerminalConnections, and changes them to use an `Initialize` method that accepts a `ValueSet` of properties.
Why?
For the upcoming window/content process work, we'll need the content process to be able to initialize the connection _in the content process_. However, the window process will be the one that knows what type of connection to make. Enter `ConnectionInformation`. This class will let us specify the class name of the type we want to create, and a set of settings to use when initializing that connection.
**IMPORTANT**: As a part of this, the constructor for a connection must have 0 arguments. `RoActivateInstance` lets you just conjure a WinRT type just by class name, but that class must have a 0 arg ctor. Hence the need for `Initialize`, to actually pass the settings.
We're using a `ValueSet` here because it's basically a json blob, with more steps. In the future, when extension authors want to have custom connections, we can always deserialize the json into a `ValueSet`, pass it to their connection's `Initialize`, and let then get what they need out of it.
## References
* Tear-out: #1256
* Megathread: #5000
* Project: https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/projects/5
## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes https://github.com/microsoft/terminal/projects/5#card-50760298
* [x] I work here
* [n/a] Tests added/passed
* [n/a] Requires documentation to be updated
## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments
`ConnectionInformation` was included as a part of this PR, to demonstrate how this will eventually be used. `ConnectionInformation` is not _currently_ used.
## Validation Steps Performed
It still builds and runs.
[Defapp] Use real HPCON for PTY management; Have Monarch always listen for connections
## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes#9464
* [x] Related to #9475 - incomplete fix
* [x] I work here.
* [x] Manual test
## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments
- Sometimes peasants can't manage to accept a connection appropriately because I wrote defterm before @zadjii-msft's monarch/peasant architecture. The simple solution here is to just make the monarch always be listening for inbound connections. Then COM won't start a peasant with -Embedding just to ask the monarch where it should go. It'll just join the active window. I didn't close 9475 because it should follow monarch policies on which window to join... and it doesn't yet.
- A lot of interesting things are happening because this didn't have a real HPCON. So I passed through the remaining handles (and re-GUID-ed the interface) that made it possible for me to pack the right process handles and such into an HPCON on the inbound connection and monitor that like any other ConptyConnection. This should resolve some of the process exit behaviors and signal channel things like resizing.
- Implements the default application behavior and handoff mechanisms
between console and terminal. The inbox portion is done already. This
adds the ability for our OpenConsole.exe to accept the incoming server
connection from the Windows OS, stand up a PTY session, start the
Windows Terminal as a listener for an incoming connection, and then
send it the incoming PTY connection for it to launch a tab.
- The tab is launched with default settings at the moment.
- You must configure the default application using the `conhost.exe`
propsheet or with the registry keys. Finishing the setting inside
Windows Terminal will be a todo after this is complete. The OS
Settings panel work to surface this setting is a dependency delivered
by another team and you will not see it here.
## Validation Steps Performed
- [x] Manual adjust of registry keys to the delegation conhost/terminal
behavior
- [x] Adjustment of the delegation options with the propsheet
- [x] Launching things from the run box manually and watching them show
in Terminal
- [x] Launching things from shortcuts and watching them show in the
Terminal
Documentation on how it works will be a TODO post completion in #9462
References #7414 - Default Terminal spec
Closes#492
This commit leverages C++/WinRT's final_release [extension point] to
pull the final destruction of ConptyConnection off onto a background
thread.
We've been seeing some deadlocks during teardown where the output thread
(holding the last owning reference to the connection) was trying to
destruct the threadpool wait while the threadpool wait was
simultaneously running its callback and waiting for the output thread to
terminate. It turns out that trying to release a threadpool wait while
it's running a callback that's blocked on you will absolutely result in
a deadlock.
Fixes#7392.
[extension point]: https://devblogs.microsoft.com/oldnewthing/20191018-00/?p=103010
This commit adds a `WT_PROFILE_ID` environment variable, which contains
the guid of the active profile.
It also teaches ConptyConnection to take an environment map on creation.
We had to do a little manual jiggery with the WSLENV environment
variable as passed by the creator.
* [x] CLA signed
* [ ] Tests added/passed
* [ ] Requires documentation to be updated
* [x] I've discussed this with core contributors already.
Ran terminal, validated vars and translated paths under windows and WSL.
References #4566 (this PR originally introduced WT_SETTINGS/DEFAULTS)
Closes#3589
## Summary of the Pull Request
This will collect some user choices related to profiles and tab settings to help us understand if and how we should change the in-built defaults.
## PR Checklist
* [x] Closes#3855
* [x] I work here.
* [x] Manual test only.
* [x] Meh, no doc update.
* [x] Am core contributor.
## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments
The following data is collected with examples of the types of questions we intend to answer:
1. What is the name of the executable attached to the PTY? (What shells are popular? Should we focus our testing on them? Are there any common ones we are blind to that we should know about?)
- "Microsoft.Windows.Terminal.Connection" {e912fe7b-eeb6-52a5-c628-abe388e5f792}
- "ConPtyConnected" event
- "SessionGuid" value = WT_SESSION
- "Client" value = Name of EXE
2. Is Acrylic used on a tab? And with what opacity? (Do people really want acrylic? Should it be default? What opacity is most pleasing in our context?)
- "Microsoft.Windows.Terminal.App" {24a1622f-7da7-5c77-3303-d850bd1ab2ed}
- "TabInformation" event
- "EventVer" value is now 1u
- "UseAcrylic" value is now TRUE/FALSE on the setting choice
- "TintOpacity" value is now Float on the setting choice
3. What font are people choosing? (Do people move away from Cascadia Code? Which ones are the most popular for us to validate when updating the renderer?)
- "Microsoft.Windows.Terminal.App" {24a1622f-7da7-5c77-3303-d850bd1ab2ed}
- "TabInformation" event
- "FontFace" value is now string font from settings
4. What keybindings do people choose to customize (Add or Remove)? (Are there extremely common keys that folks bind or unbind that we should have adjusted by default in a fresh install?)
- "Microsoft.Windows.Terminal.App" {24a1622f-7da7-5c77-3303-d850bd1ab2ed}
- "CustomKeybindings" event
- "Keybindings" value is the entire JSON segment that describes the user keybindings from `settings.json`.
5. Do people change their default profile from the PowerShell one we set? If so, to what? (Should we not set PowerShell as the default? Should we adjust the ranking of our dynamic generators to favor the most popular ones to bubble to the top?)
- "Microsoft.Windows.Terminal.App" {24a1622f-7da7-5c77-3303-d850bd1ab2ed}
- "CustomDefaultProfile" event
- "DefaultProfile" value is the GUID of the chosen profile
## Validation Steps Performed
1. Implemented the events
2. Launched the ETL channel viewer
3. Triggered the events
4. Saw the data come out
Generated by https://github.com/jsoref/spelling `f`; to maintain your repo, please consider `fchurn`
I generally try to ignore upstream bits. I've accidentally included some items from the `deps/` directory. I expect someone will give me a list of items to drop, I'm happy to drop whole files/directories, or to split the PR into multiple items (E.g. comments/locals/public).
Closes#4294
## Summary of the Pull Request
- Enables auditing of some Terminal libraries (Connection, Core, Settings)
- Also audit WinConPTY.LIB since Connection depends on it
## PR Checklist
* [x] Rolls audit out to more things
* [x] I work here
* [x] Tests should still pass
* [x] Am core contributor
## Detailed Description of the Pull Request / Additional comments
This is turning on the auditing of these projects (as enabled by the heavier lifting in the other refactor) and then cleaning up the remaining warnings.
## Validation Steps Performed
- [x] Built it
- [x] Ran the tests
This pull request implements the new
`ITerminalConnection::ConnectionState` interface (enum, event) and
connects it through TerminalControl to Pane, Tab and App as specified in
#2039. It does so to implement `closeOnExit` = `graceful` in addition to
the other two normal CoE types.
It also:
* exposes the singleton `CascadiaSettings` through a function that
looks it up by using the current Xaml application's `AppLogic`.
* In so doing, we've broken up the weird runaround where App tells
TerminalSettings to CloseOnExit and then later another part of App
_asks TerminalControl_ to tell it what TerminalSettings said App
told it earlier. `:crazy_eyes:`
* wires up a bunch of connection state points to `AzureConnection`.
This required moving the Azure connection's state machine to use another
enum name (oops).
* ships a helper class for managing connection state transitions.
* contains a bunch of template magic.
* introduces `WINRT_CALLBACK`, a oneshot callback like `TYPED_EVENT`.
* replaces a bunch of disparate `_connecting` and `_closing` members
with just one uberstate.
* updates the JSON schema and defaults to prefer closeOnExit: graceful
* updates all relevant documentation
Specified in #2039Fixes#2563
Co-authored-by: mcpiroman <38111589+mcpiroman@users.noreply.github.com>
This commit renames the functions in conpty.lib to Conpty* so that they
can be explicitly linked and introduces a header so they can be located.
It also updates the DEF for conpty.dll to reexport them with their
original names.
The crux of the issue here is that TerminalConnection is consuming the
_import_ symbols for the *PseudoConsole family of APIs, which simply
cannot be supplanted by a static library.
Avenues explored: * Exporting __imp_x from the static library to get all
up in kernel32's business. * Using /ALTERNATENAME:__imp_X=StaticX. It
turns out ALTERNATENAME is only consulted when the symbol isn't found
through traditional means.
This, renaming them, is the straightest path forward.
Fixes#3553.
This commit deletes ConhostConnection and replaces it with
ConptyConnection. The ConptyConnection uses CreatePseudoConsole and
depends on winconpty to override the one from kernel32.
* winconpty must be packageable, so I've added GetPackagingOutputs.
* To validate this, I added conpty.dll to the MSIX regression script.
* I moved the code from conpty-universal that deals with environment
strings into the types library.
This puts us in a way better place to implement #2563, as we can now
separately detect a failure to launch a pseudoconsole, a failure to
CreateProcess, and an unexpected termination of the launched process.
Fixes#1131.