resizing the window unless it is the current window, and if we do and
don't resize the pane until later there are problems if the size changes
from A to B then back to A.
lines (ACS or UTF-8), double or heavy (UTF-8), simple (plain ASCII) or
number (the pane numbers). Lines that won't work on a non-UTF-8 terminal
are translated back into ACS when they are output.
client and allows it to be changed independently from the real active
pane stored in the window. This is can be used with session groups which
allow an independent current window (although it would be nice to have a
flag for this too and remove session groups). The client active pane is
only really useful interactively, many things (hooks, window-style,
zooming) still use the window active pane.
client, use the same mechanism for the read-only flag and add an
ignore-size flag.
refresh-client -F has become -f (-F stays for backwards compatibility)
and attach-session and switch-client now have -f flags also. A new
format "client_flags" lists the flags and is shown by list-clients by
default.
This separates the read-only flag from "ignore size" behaviour (new
ignore-size) flag - both behaviours are useful in different
circumstances.
attach -r and switchc -r remain and set or toggle both flags together.
everything up in tty_ctx. Provide a way to initialize the tty_ctx from a
callback and use it to let popups draw directly through input_parse in
the same way as panes do, rather than forcing a full redraw on every
change.
- Add styles for the search marking styles (copy-mode-match-style and
copy-mode-current-match-style).
- Show the current match (the one with the cursor on it) in a different style.
- Copying without a selection will copy the current match if there is one.
- Show a menu with completions if there are multiple.
- Don't complete argument stuff (options, layouts) at start of text.
- For -t and -s, if there is no : then complete sessions but if there is
a :, show a menu of all windows in the session rather than trying to
complete the window name which is a bit useless if there are
duplicates.
which allows formats to be expanded. Any styles without a '#{' are still
validated when they are set but any with a '#{' are not. Formats are not
expanded usefully in many cases yet, that will be changed later.
To make this work, a few other changes:
- set-option -a with a style option automatically appends a ",".
- OSC 10 and 11 don't set the window-style option anymore, instead the
fg and bg are stored in the pane struct and act as the defaults that
can be overridden by window-style.
- status-fg and -bg now override status-style instead of trying to keep
them in sync.
terminal features, each of which are defined in one place and map to a
builtin set of terminfo(5) capabilities. Features can be specified based
on TERM with a new terminal-features option or with the -T flag when
running tmux. tmux will also detect a few common terminals from the DA
and DSR responses.
This is intended to make it easier to configure tmux's use of
terminfo(5) even in the presence of outdated ncurses(3) or terminfo(5)
databases or for features which do not yet have a terminfo(5) entry.
Instead of having to grok terminfo(5) capability names and what they
should be set to in the terminal-overrides option, the user can
hopefully just give tmux a feature name and let it do the right thing.
The terminal-overrides option remains both for backwards compatibility
and to allow tweaks of individual capabilities.
tmux already did much of this already, this makes it tidier and simpler
to configure.
clear it on the first redraw, and it can't be set when we are finished
or they would be redrawn again, so if the redraw is deferred for a
client, copy the redraw flag into a separate set of bits just for that
client.
the data from the last one, other panes could update while waiting, so
we set the flag to redraw them all when the new redraw actually
happened. But this means a lot of redrawing panes unnecessarily if they
haven't changed - so instead set a flag to say "at least one pane needs
to be redrawed" then look at the invidual pane flags to see which ones
need it.
created, resize it and let the resize/reflow code fix it up and return
it. Solves various problems with cursor position and resizing when in
copy mode. With Anindya Mukherjee.
newlines. This means that for example bind q { a \n b } and bind q "a ;
b" are the same. Also log commands in different groups separated by ;;
rather than ; (a command list like this should never be user visible).
creating a new state for each group of commands, require the caller to
create one and use it for all the commands in the list. This means the
current target works even with list with multiple groups (which can
happen if they are defined with newlines).
reference to it, it isn't necessary that the pane in copy mode is the
same as the one copying from. Add a -s flag to copy-mode to specify a
different pane for the source content. This means it is possible to view
two places in a pane's history at the same time in different panes, or
copy from a pane's history into an editor or shell in the same pane.
From Anindya Mukherjee.
attributes request and other bits that prompt a reply from the terminal.
This means that stray relies are not left on the terminal if the command
has attached and then immediately detached and tmux will not be around
to receive them. Prompted by a problem report from espie@.
freeze updates (which does not play nicely with some applications, a
longstanding problem) and will allow some other changes later. From
Anindya Mukherjee.
double click, even if the timer hasn't expired to confirm it isn't
actually a triple click. Provides a way for people who don't care about
triple clicks or can make their commands have no side effects to avoid
the double click timer delay.
umask 177 instead of 117 because it may not be in a safe directory like
the default directory in /tmp. The user can chmod it more open after it
is created if they want.
use this to add descriptions to the default key bindings. A new -N flag
to list-keys shows key bindings with notes rather than the default
bind-key command used to create them. Change the default ? binding to
use this to show a readable summary of keys.
Also extend command-prompt to return the name of the key pressed and add
a default binding (/) to show the note for the next key pressed
Suggested by Alex Tremblay in GitHub issue 2000.
confused with mouse sequences. Also set a flag and don't bother checking
for it if we have already seen it (same for DA), and don't check if we
never asked for it.
ends up pointing to the wrong place before it is passed to the client.
The path is only used internally so there is no real need for
realpath(), remove it and move the get_path function to file.c where all
the callers are.
not attached, the server process asks it to open the file, similar to
how works for stdin, stdout, stderr. This makes special files like
/dev/fd/X work (used by some shells). stdin, stdout and stderr and
control mode are now just special cases of the same mechanism. This will
also make it easier to use for other commands that read files such as
source-file.
and attributes and use them to restore the previous behaviour of
window-status-style being the default for window-status-format in the
status line. From John Drouhard in GitHub issue 1912.
was output in the pane faster than the timer would fire, so change how
it works to only defer the timer again if the pane was actually resized
within the last timer period. Reported by James Tai in GitHub issue
1880.
(needed for control clients to send mouse sequences). Also add some
format flags for UTF-8 and SGR mouse mode. Requested by Bradley Smith in
GitHub issues 1832 and 1833.
there should be no change to existing behaviour) and are set and shown
with set-option -p and show-options -p.
Change remain-on-exit and window-style/window-active-style to be pane
options (some others will be changed later).
This makes select-pane -P and -g unnecessary so no longer document them
(they still work) and no longer document set-window-option and
show-window-options in favour of set-option -w and show-options -w.
to start, otherwise commands like lsk which start the server again can
end up looping infinitely. Also make the first client exit
correctly. Problem reported by Wael M Nasreddine.
parser using yacc(1). This is a major change but is clearer and simpler
and allows some edge cases to be made more consistent, as well as
tidying up how aliases are handled. It will also allow some further
improvements later.
Entirely the same parser is now used for parsing the configuration file
and for string commands. This means that constructs previously only
available in .tmux.conf, such as %if, can now be used in string commands
(for example, those given to if-shell - not commands invoked from the
shell, they are still parsed by the shell itself).
The only syntax change I am aware of is that #{} outside quotes or a
comment is now considered a format and not a comment, so #{ is now a
syntax error (notably, if it is at the start of a line).
This also adds two new sections to the man page documenting the syntax
and outlining how parsing and command execution works.
Thanks to everyone who sent me test configs (they still all parse
without errors - but this doesn't mean they still work as intended!).
Thanks to Avi Halachmi for testing and man page improvements, also to
jmc@ for reviewing the man page changes.
immediately rather than queuing them (the command can block the queue
which means they were not being seen until it finished which was too
late). Reported by denis@ and solene@, ok solene@.
flag -e to new-window, split-window, respawn-window, respawn-pane to
pass environment variables into the newly created process. From Steffen
Christgau in GitHub issue 1697.
multiple commands to be easily bound to one hook. set-hook and
show-hooks remain but they are now variants of set-option and
show-options. show-options now has a -H flag to show hooks (by default
they are not shown).
changes to allow the status line to be entirely configured with a single
option.
Now that it is possible to configure their content, enable the existing
code that lets the status line be multiple lines in height. The status
option can now take a value of 2, 3, 4 or 5 (as well as the previous on
or off) to configure more than one line. The new status-format array
option configures the format of each line, the default just references
the existing status-* options, although some of the more obscure status
options may be eliminated in time.
Additions to the #[] syntax are: "align" to specify alignment (left,
centre, right), "list" for the window list and "range" to configure
ranges of text for the mouse bindings.
The "align" keyword can also be used to specify alignment of entries in
tree mode and the pane status lines.
and use tty_clear_line (which will choose the best escape sequence) to
clear any batches of cells with that flag when redrawing a line from the
stored screen.
and the previous restored when the top is exited. If a mode that is
already on the stack is entered, the existing instance is moved to the
top as the active mode rather than being opened new.
been a limitation for a long time.
There are two new options, window-size and default-size, and a new
command, resize-window. The force-width and force-height options and the
session_width and session_height formats have been removed.
The new window-size option tells tmux how to work out the size of
windows: largest means it picks the size of the largest session,
smallest the smallest session (similar to the old behaviour) and manual
means that it does not automatically resize windows. The default is
currently largest but this may change. aggressive-resize modifies the
choice of session for largest and smallest as it did before.
If a window is in a session attached to a client that is too small, only
part of the window is shown. tmux attempts to keep the cursor visible,
so the part of the window displayed is changed as the cursor moves (with
a small delay, to try and avoid excess redrawing when applications
redraw status lines or similar that are not currently visible). The
offset of the visible portion of the window is shown in status-right.
Drawing windows which are larger than the client is not as efficient as
those which fit, particularly when the cursor moves, so it is
recommended to avoid using this on slow machines or networks (set
window-size to smallest or manual).
The resize-window command can be used to resize a window manually. If it
is used, the window-size option is automatically set to manual for the
window (undo this with "setw -u window-size"). resize-window works in a
similar way to resize-pane (-U -D -L -R -x -y flags) but also has -a and
-A flags. -a sets the window to the size of the smallest client (what it
would be if window-size was smallest) and -A the largest.
For the same behaviour as force-width or force-height, use resize-window
-x or -y, and "setw -u window-size" to revert to automatic sizing..
If the global window-size option is set to manual, the default-size
option is used for new windows. If -x or -y is used with new-session,
that sets the default-size option for the new session.
The maximum size of a window is 10000x10000. But expect applications to
complain and much higher memory use if making a window excessively
big. The minimum size is the size required for the current layout
including borders.
The refresh-client command can be used to pan around a window, -U -D -L
-R moves up, down, left or right and -c returns to automatic cursor
tracking. The position is reset when the current window is changed.