Closes https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/issues/21657
Follow-up of https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/pull/22488
Previous PR broke git blame tooltips, which are expected to be open when
hovered, even if the mouse cursor is moved away from the actual blame
entry that caused the tooltip to appear.
Current version moves the invalidation logic into `prepaint_tooltip`,
where the new data about the tooltip origin is used to ensure we
invalidate only tooltips that have no mouse cursor in either origin
bounds or tooltip bounds (if it's hoverable).
Release Notes:
- Fixed tooltips getting stuck
This reverts commit 344284e013.
That change broke git blame tooltips, as Zed should also show tooltips
which are hovered, even though the mouse had left the origin element's
bounds.
Release Notes:
- N/A
Closes https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/issues/21657
In case of the task rerun button tooltip from
f6dabadaf7/crates/terminal_view/src/terminal_view.rs (L1051-L1070)
, the actual button element is not styled as invisible, only its parent.
Zed won't render such element since it's parent is hidden, but will
consider it "visible" all the time its `paint` is called, spawning a
task with the delay, that will create the tooltip:
f6dabadaf7/crates/gpui/src/elements/div.rs (L1949-L1959)
When the parent is hidden, the child won't be painted anymore, and no
mouse listeners will be able to detect this fact and hide the tooltip.
Hence, check such cases separately, during `prepaint`, and invalidate
the tooltips that are not valid anymore.
We cannot use `hitbox.is_hovered(cx)` as it's not really hovered during
prepaint, so a mouse position check is used instead.
Release Notes:
- Fixed tooltips getting stuck
* Remove unnecessary WindowContext and ViewContext '_ lifetimes
* Removed some cases where WindowContext has a different name than `cx`.
Release Notes:
- N/A
This PR adds a more comprehensive shadow example to gpui:
![CleanShot 2024-12-26 at 13 54
05@2x](https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/452fb8a1-d294-4b56-b0e0-f4e4ca6c29d4)
This is prep to work on the following issues:
- Shadows with a blur of 0 do not render. Expected: A shadow with sharp
edges (#22433)
- Spread does not correctly conform to the shape the shadow is cast from
Release Notes:
- N/A
Closes#22366
This PR fixes the issue of crashing when minimizing a window on Windows
11. And this PR supersedes #22366.
The main change in this PR is to stop rendering the window when it is
minimized. Additionally, I’ve made some modifications to the code in
#21756 to improve clarity (I think...).
cc @mgsloan
Release Notes:
- N/A
Closes#17870
Context:
On Linux, when creating a new window, bounds are either pulled from
existing workspace data (serialized in an SQLite DB) or fall back to
some default constants if no data exists.
These bounds include the full dimensions of the window (width and
height), which already account for insets. However, properties like
`inset` (Wayland) or `last_insets` (X11) exist only at the platform
level and are not part of the window bounds themselves.
During rendering, we call `set_client_inset`, which updates the inset
values and also adjusts the window bounds, increasing their dimensions.
In Zed's case, the inset is 10px, which adds 20px to both the width and
height (10px from each side).
Problem:
When quitting, the full window bounds (which already account for inset)
are saved to the DB. On reopening, these saved bounds are used to create
the window. `set_client_inset` runs again and inflates the dimensions
even more.
Solution:
Store window bounds *without* the inset-inflated dimensions. On the next
session, `set_client_inset` will take care of applying the inset,
resulting window dimensions matching the previous session. This fix is
in the PR.
Alternative Solution:
Another option is to save the inset explicitly in the DB and apply it
during window creation. But this means storing more data, and the inset
would need to be platform-agnostic, which adds complexity. Doesn’t seem
worth it for no real gain.
X11 Before:
```sh
saving window bounds with width: 1136, height: 784
tims@lemon ~/w/zed (fix-window-growing-larger)> cargo run
Finished `dev` profile [unoptimized + debuginfo] target(s) in 0.37s
Running `target/debug/zed`
saving window bounds with width: 1156, height: 804 <---- +20px
tims@lemon ~/w/zed (fix-window-growing-larger)> cargo run
Finished `dev` profile [unoptimized + debuginfo] target(s) in 0.35s
Running `target/debug/zed`
saving window bounds with width: 1176, height: 824 <---- +20px
tims@lemon ~/w/zed (fix-window-growing-larger)> cargo run
Finished `dev` profile [unoptimized + debuginfo] target(s) in 0.36s
Running `target/debug/zed`
saving window bounds with width: 1196, height: 844 <---- +20px
```
X11 After:
```sh
Finished `dev` profile [unoptimized + debuginfo] target(s) in 0.35s
Running `target/debug/zed`
saving window bounds with width: 1116, height: 764
tims@lemon ~/w/zed (fix-window-growing-larger)> cargo run
Finished `dev` profile [unoptimized + debuginfo] target(s) in 0.35s
Running `target/debug/zed`
saving window bounds with width: 1116, height: 764 <---- same
tims@lemon ~/w/zed (fix-window-growing-larger)> cargo run
Finished `dev` profile [unoptimized + debuginfo] target(s) in 0.35s
Running `target/debug/zed`
saving window bounds with width: 1116, height: 764 <---- same
```
On Wayland, saving occurs only when you actually resize the window (on
X11, saving happens both on init and while dragging the window). To
trigger saving, I manually resized the window by ~1px to make it print.
Wayland Before:
```sh
Finished `dev` profile [unoptimized + debuginfo] target(s) in 1m 36s
Running `target/debug/zed`
saving window bounds with width: 945, height: 577
tims@orange ~/zed (fix-window-growing-larger)> cargo run
Finished `dev` profile [unoptimized + debuginfo] target(s) in 1.77s
Running `target/debug/zed`
saving window bounds with width: 966, height: 597 <--- +20px on both (1px increase in width is me resizing)
tims@orange ~/zed (fix-window-growing-larger)> cargo run
Finished `dev` profile [unoptimized + debuginfo] target(s) in 0.87s
Running `target/debug/zed`
saving window bounds with width: 987, height: 618 <--- +20px on both (1px increase in width and height is me resizing)
tims@orange ~/zed (fix-window-growing-larger)> cargo run
Finished `dev` profile [unoptimized + debuginfo] target(s) in 0.89s
Running `target/debug/zed`
saving window bounds with width: 1006, height: 638 <--- +20px on both (1px decrease in width is me resizing)
```
Wayland After:
```sh
Finished `dev` profile [unoptimized + debuginfo] target(s) in 0.82s
Running `target/debug/zed`
saving window bounds with width: 925, height: 558
tims@orange ~/zed (fix-window-growing-larger)> cargo run
Finished `dev` profile [unoptimized + debuginfo] target(s) in 0.84s
Running `target/debug/zed`
saving window bounds with width: 925, height: 557 <--- same (1px decrease in height is me resizing)
saving window bounds with width: 925, height: 558
```
Release Notes:
- Fix non-maximized zed windows growing larger across sessions on Linux
---------
Co-authored-by: mgsloan@gmail.com <michael@zed.dev>
Closes#22264
On Linux, the arrow cursor style currently used by Zed is `arrow`.
However, this style might not be available in most themes, causing the
cursor to fall back to system default theme. Note cursor style are
platform (X11 and Wayland) agnostic.
Most themes use `left_ptr` as their arrow cursor style instead of
`arrow`. In some cases, `left_ptr` and `arrow` are symlinks pointing to
the `default` style, but the `default` style is not guaranteed to be
available across all themes.
After inspecting the available cursor themes on popular desktop
environments, changing the default from `arrow` to `left_ptr` seems to
be available in all of them. `left_ptr` as default cursor style is also
mentioned in [Arch Wiki: Cursor
themes](https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/Cursor_themes#Change_X_shaped_default_cursor).
KDE:
```sh
tims@lemon /u/s/icons> find . -name "arrow"
./Breeze_Snow/cursors/arrow
./breeze_cursors/cursors/arrow
./Adwaita/cursors/arrow
tims@lemon /u/s/icons> find . -name "default"
./default
./Breeze_Snow/cursors/default
./breeze_cursors/cursors/default
./Adwaita/cursors/default
tims@lemon /u/s/icons> find . -name "left_ptr"
./Oxygen_White/cursors/left_ptr
./KDE_Classic/cursors/left_ptr
./Oxygen_Yellow/cursors/left_ptr
./Oxygen_Blue/cursors/left_ptr
./Oxygen_Black/cursors/left_ptr
./Breeze_Snow/cursors/left_ptr
./breeze_cursors/cursors/left_ptr
./Adwaita/cursors/left_ptr
./Oxygen_Zion/cursors/left_ptr
```
Gnome:
```sh
tims@orange:/usr/share/icons$ find . -name "arrow"
./DMZ-Black/cursors/arrow
./Adwaita/cursors/arrow
./redglass/cursors/arrow
./whiteglass/cursors/arrow
./handhelds/cursors/arrow
./Yaru/cursors/arrow
./DMZ-White/cursors/arrow
tims@orange:/usr/share/icons$ find . -name "default"
./Adwaita/cursors/default
./default
./Yaru/cursors/default
tims@orange:/usr/share/icons$ find . -name "left_ptr"
./DMZ-Black/cursors/left_ptr
./Adwaita/cursors/left_ptr
./redglass/cursors/left_ptr
./whiteglass/cursors/left_ptr
./handhelds/cursors/left_ptr
./Yaru/cursors/left_ptr
./DMZ-White/cursors/left_ptr
```
My theme is set to Oxygen Yellow here.
Before:
<img
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/7485f1e7-5936-45b4-96bd-399525bad95d"
alt="before" width="450px" />
After:
<img
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/56090735-6a1f-4652-ad3e-075ff4c3f9ab"
alt="after" width="450px" />
Release Notes:
- Fixed wrong cursor theme for arrow cursor style on Linux.
Closes#17005
Release Notes:
- Improved GPU context management: share a single context with multiple
surfaces.
### High Level
Blade got a proper support for Surface objects in
https://github.com/kvark/blade/pull/203.
That was mainly motivated by Zed needing to draw multiple windows. With
the Surface API, Zed is now able to have the GPU context tied to the
"Platform" instead of "Window". Practically speaking, this means:
- architecture more sound
- faster to open/close windows
- less surprises, more robust
### Concerns
1. Zed has been using a temporary workaround for the platform bug on
some Intel+Nvidia machines that makes us unable to present -
https://github.com/kvark/blade/pull/144 . This workaround is no longer
available with the new architecture. I'm looking for ideas on how to
approach this better.
- we are now picking up the change in
https://github.com/kvark/blade/pull/210, which allows forcing a specific
Device ID. This should allow Zed users to work around the issue. We
could help them to automate it, too.
2. ~~Metal-rs dependency is switched to
https://github.com/kvark/metal-rs/tree/blade, since upstream isn't
responsive in merging changes that are required for Blade. Hopefully,
temporary.~~
- ~~we can also hack around it by just transmuting the texture
references, since we know those are unchanged in the branch. That would
allow Blade to use it's own version of Metal, temporarily, if switching
metal-rs in the workspace is a concern.~~
- merged my metal-rs changes and updated Zed to use the upstream github
reference
---------
Co-authored-by: Mikayla Maki <mikayla@zed.dev>
Co-authored-by: Mikayla Maki <mikayla.c.maki@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Conrad Irwin <conrad.irwin@gmail.com>
* Presence of the aside no longer affects position or size of the
context menu.
* Prefers to fit to the right, then on same side of line, then other
side of line, within the following preference order:
- Max possible size within text area.
- Max possible size within window.
- Actual size within window. This is the only case that could cause it
to jump around with less stability.
A further enhancement atop this might be to dynamically resize aside
height to fit.
Release notes are N/A as they are covered by the notes for #22102.
Closes#8523
Release Notes:
* N/A
Previously, each window stored its own collection of focus handles. This
meant that to create a focus handle, you needed to have access to a
Window. I'm working on a simplification to gpui's context types that
removes `WindowContext` and `ViewContext` in favor of passing a window
reference explicitly when rendering or handling events. You'll still
need a window to manipulate focus, but it will be helpful to be able to
create focus handles without a window.
cc @mgsloan
Release Notes:
- N/A
This PR updates the `gpui::prelude` to not export the `Context` trait
named.
This prevents some naming clashes in downstream consumers.
Release Notes:
- N/A
From diff looks like no material differences. With a local checkout of
`v0.13.0` I get build errors due to warning checking when I use a `path
= ...` dependency, but it is fixed with `v0.13.1`.
I see mention of this in the [renovate configuration
PR](https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/pull/15132) but doesn't seem
like that initial batch of renovation happened.
Release Notes:
- N/A
This was added before we were handling key equivalents, and is no longer
needed. Furthermore in the gpui2 re-write we stopped sending the correct
modifiers so this hasn't worked for the last year.
Fixes#21520
Release Notes:
- Fixed a bug where cmd-escape could act like .
Similar to #20826 but keeps the Swift implementation. There were quite a
few changes in the `call` crate, and so that code now has two variants.
Closes#13714
Release Notes:
- Added preliminary Linux support for voice chat and viewing
screenshares.
---------
Co-authored-by: Kirill Bulatov <mail4score@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Kirill Bulatov <kirill@zed.dev>
Co-authored-by: Mikayla <mikayla@zed.dev>
The macOS input handler assumes that you want to insert control
sequences when
you type ctrl-alt-X (you probably don't...).
Release Notes:
- (nightly only) fix ctrl-alt-X shortcuts
Found this while looking into adding support for the Surface primitive
on Linux, for rendering video shares. In that case it would be
expensive to compare images for equality. `Eq` and `PartialEq` were
being required but not used here due to use of `Ord` and `PartialOrd`.
Release Notes:
- N/A
Co-Authored-By: Richard Feldman <richard@zed.dev>
Closes#21392
Release Notes:
- Fixed dismissing the macOS IME menu with escape when no marked text
was present
---------
Co-authored-by: Richard Feldman <richard@zed.dev>
Closes#15788, #13258
This is a long-standing issue with a few previous attempts to fix it,
such as [this one](https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/pull/17496).
However, that fix was later reverted because it resolved the blur issue
but caused a size issue. Currently, both blur and size issues persist
when you set a custom cursor size from GNOME Settings and use fractional
scaling.
This PR addresses both issues.
---
### Context
A new Wayland protocol,
[cursor-shape-v1](https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/wayland/wayland-protocols/-/merge_requests/194),
allows the compositor to handle rendering the cursor at the correct size
and shape. This protocol is implemented by KDE, wlroots (Sway-like
environments), etc. Zed supports this protocol, so there are no issues
on these desktop environments.
However, GNOME has not yet
[adopted](https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gtk/-/merge_requests/6212) this
protocol. As a result, apps must fall back to manually rendering the
cursor by specifying the theme, size, scale, etc., themselves. Zed also
implements this fallback but does not correctly account for the display
scale.
---
### Scale Fix
For example, if your cursor size is `64px` and you’re using fractional
scaling (e.g., `150%`), the display scale reported by the window query
will be an integer value, `2` in this case. Why `2` if the scale is
`150%`? That’s what the new protocol aims to improve. However, since
GNOME Wayland uses this integer scale everywhere, it’s sufficient for
our use case.
To fix the issue, we set the `buffer_scale` to this value. But that
alone doesn’t solve the problem. We also need to generate a matching
theme cursor size for this scaled version. This can be calculated as
`64px` * `2`, resulting in `128px` as the theme cursor size.
---
### Size Fix
The XDG Desktop Portal’s `cursor-size` event fails to read the cursor
size because it expects an `i32` but encounters a type error with `u32`.
Due to this, the cursor size was interpreted as the default `24px`
instead of the actual size set via user.
---
### Tested
This fix has been tested with all possible combinations of the
following:
- [x] GNOME Normal Scale (100%, 200%, etc.)
- [x] GNOME Fractional Scaling (125%, 150%, etc.)
- [x] GNOME Cursor Sizes (**Settings > Accessibility > Seeing**, e.g.,
`24px`, `64px`, etc.)
- [x] GNOME Experimental Feature `scale-monitor-framebuffer` (both
enabled and disabled)
- [x] KDE (`cursor-shape-v1` protocol)
---
**Result:**
64px custom cursor size + 150% Fractional Scale:
https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/cf3b1a0f-9a25-45d0-ab03-75059d3305e7
---
Release Notes:
- Fixed mouse cursor size and blur issues on Wayland
Closes#19866
This PR supersedes #19228, as #19228 encountered too many merge
conflicts.
After some exploration, I found that for paths with the `\\?\` prefix,
we can safely remove it and consistently use the clean paths in all
cases. Previously, in #19228, I thought we would still need the `\\?\`
prefix for IO operations to handle long paths better. However, this
turns out to be unnecessary because Rust automatically manages this for
us when calling IO-related APIs. For details, refer to Rust's internal
function
[`get_long_path`](017ae1b21f/library/std/src/sys/path/windows.rs (L225-L233)).
Therefore, we can always store and use paths without the `\\?\` prefix.
This PR introduces a `SanitizedPath` structure, which represents a path
stripped of the `\\?\` prefix. To prevent untrimmed paths from being
mistakenly passed into `Worktree`, the type of `Worktree`’s `abs_path`
member variable has been changed to `SanitizedPath`.
Additionally, this PR reverts the changes of #15856 and #18726. After
testing, it appears that the issues those PRs addressed can be resolved
by this PR.
### Existing Issue
To keep the scope of modifications manageable, `Worktree::abs_path` has
retained its current signature as `fn abs_path(&self) -> Arc<Path>`,
rather than returning a `SanitizedPath`. Updating the method to return
`SanitizedPath`—which may better resolve path inconsistencies—would
likely introduce extensive changes similar to those in #19228.
Currently, the limitation is as follows:
```rust
let abs_path: &Arc<Path> = snapshot.abs_path();
let some_non_trimmed_path = Path::new("\\\\?\\C:\\Users\\user\\Desktop\\project");
// The caller performs some actions here:
some_non_trimmed_path.strip_prefix(abs_path); // This fails
some_non_trimmed_path.starts_with(abs_path); // This fails too
```
The final two lines will fail because `snapshot.abs_path()` returns a
clean path without the `\\?\` prefix. I have identified two relevant
instances that may face this issue:
-
[lsp_store.rs#L3578](0173479d18/crates/project/src/lsp_store.rs (L3578))
-
[worktree.rs#L4338](0173479d18/crates/worktree/src/worktree.rs (L4338))
Switching `Worktree::abs_path` to return `SanitizedPath` would resolve
these issues but would also lead to many code changes.
Any suggestions or feedback on this approach are very welcome.
cc @SomeoneToIgnore
Release Notes:
- N/A