- [x] Rewrite worktree git handling
- [x] Fix tests
- [x] Fix `test_propagate_statuses_for_repos_under_project`
- [x] Replace `WorkDirectoryEntry` with `WorkDirectory` in
`RepositoryEntry`
- [x] Add a worktree event for capturing git status changes
- [x] Confirm that the local repositories are correctly updating the new
WorkDirectory field
- [x] Implement the git statuses query as a join when pulling entries
out of worktree
- [x] Use this new join to implement the project panel and outline
panel.
- [x] Synchronize git statuses over the wire for collab and remote dev
(use the existing `worktree_repository_statuses` table, adjust as
needed)
- [x] Only send changed statuses to collab
Release Notes:
- N/A
---------
Co-authored-by: Cole Miller <cole@zed.dev>
Co-authored-by: Mikayla <mikayla@zed.com>
Co-authored-by: Nathan <nathan@zed.dev>
When switching from just running the editor directly to using the CLI I
missed the logs in the terminal and started using `--foreground`. I
realized this was because there was a tiny amount of effort involved in
finding out where logs were being written to. Having the cli output it
to stderr helps make this more visible.
Seems like such a minor thing not listing in release notes.
Release Notes:
- N/A
Closes#21406
Context:
A few weeks ago on Linux, we resolved an
[issue](https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/issues/20070) where users
could not open more than one file from the file explorer. This was fixed
by replacing `zed-editor` (zed binary in the code) with `zed` (cli
binary in the code) in the `.desktop` file. The reason for this change
was that using the cli to open files is more convenient - it determines
weather to spawn a new Zed instance or use an existing one, if we use
main binary instead it would throw error `Zed is already running`.
You can read the complete PR here: [linux: Fix file not opening from
file explorer](https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/pull/21137).
While this fix resolved the original issue, it introduced a new one.
Problem:
When the cli binary is used, it assumes it is always being invoked from
a terminal and relies on `std::env::vars()` to retrieve the environment
variables needed to spawn Zed. These env vars are then passed to the
worktree, and eventually, languages use the `PATH` from this env to find
binaries. This leads to the "Failed to start language server" error when
the `.desktop` entry is used on Linux.
Solution:
When the `zed-editor` binary is used, it uses some clever Unix-specific
logic to retrieve the default shell (`load_shell_from_passwd`) and then
fetch the env vars from that shell (`load_login_shell_environment`).
This same logic should be used in the cli binary when it is invoked via
a `.desktop` entry rather than from a terminal.
Approach:
I moved these two functions mentioned above to a utils file and reused
them in cli binary to fetch env vars only on Linux when it is not run
from a terminal. This provides missing paths, and fix the issue.
It is also possible to handle this in the `zed-editor` binary by
modifying the logic in `handle_cli_connection`, where `CliRequest::Open`
is processed. There we can discard incoming env, and use our logic. But
discarding incoming envs felt weird, and I thought it's better to handle
this at source.
Release Notes:
- Fixed `Failed to start language server` errors when starting from
dekstop entry on Linux
This PR contains the following updates:
| Package | Type | Update | Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| [ipc-channel](https://redirect.github.com/servo/ipc-channel) |
dependencies | minor | `0.18` -> `0.19` |
---
### Configuration
📅 **Schedule**: Branch creation - "after 3pm on Wednesday" in timezone
America/New_York, Automerge - At any time (no schedule defined).
🚦 **Automerge**: Disabled by config. Please merge this manually once you
are satisfied.
♻ **Rebasing**: Whenever PR becomes conflicted, or you tick the
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🔕 **Ignore**: Close this PR and you won't be reminded about this update
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---
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---
Release Notes:
- N/A
<!--renovate-debug:eyJjcmVhdGVkSW5WZXIiOiIzOS4xOS4wIiwidXBkYXRlZEluVmVyIjoiMzkuMTkuMCIsInRhcmdldEJyYW5jaCI6Im1haW4iLCJsYWJlbHMiOltdfQ==-->
Co-authored-by: renovate[bot] <29139614+renovate[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
Closes#14306
This looks at what #16660 did and install.sh script as a base for the
uninstall.sh script. The script is bundled with the cli by default
unless the cli/no-bundled-uninstall feature is selected which is done,
so package managers could build zed without bundling a useless feature
and increasing binary size.
I don't have capabilities to test this right now, so any help with that
is appreciated.
Release Notes:
- Added an uninstall script for Zed installations done via zed.dev. To
uninstall zed, run `zed --uninstall` via the CLI binary.
This changes the Zed CLI `zed` to pass along the environment to the Zed
project that it opens (if it opens a new one).
In projects, this CLI environment will now take precedence over any
environment that's acquired by running a login shell in a projects
folder.
The result is that `zed my/folder` now always behaves as if one would
run `zed --foreground` without any previous Zed version running.
Closes#7894Closes#16293
Related issues:
- It fixes the issue described in here:
https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/issues/4977#issuecomment-2305272027
Release Notes:
- Improved the Zed CLI `zed` to pass along the environment as it was on
the CLI to the opened Zed project. That environment is then used when
opening new terminals, spawning tasks, or language servers.
Specifically:
- If Zed was started via `zed my-folder`, a terminal spawned with
`workspace: new terminal` will inherit these environment variables that
existed on the CLI
- Specific language servers that allow looking up the language server
binary in the environments `$PATH` (such as `gopls`, `zls`,
`rust-analyzer` if configured, ...) will look up the language server
binary in the CLI environment too and use that environment when starting
the process.
- Language servers that are _not_ found in the CLI environment (or
configured to not be found in there), will be spawned with the CLI
environment in case that's set. That means users can do something like
`RA_LOG=info zed .` and it will be picked up the rust-analyzer that was
spawned.
Demo/explanation:
https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/455905cc-8b7c-4fc4-b98a-7e027d97cdfa
This simplifies `PathWithPosition` by making the common use case
concrete and removing the manual, incomplete Windows path parsing.
Windows paths also don't get '/'s replaced by '\\'s anymore to limit the
responsibility of the code to just parsing out the suffix and creating
`PathBuf` from the rest. `Path::file_name()` is now used to extract the
filename and potential suffix instead of manual parsing from the full
input. This way e.g. Windows paths that begin with a drive letter are
handled correctly without platform-specific hacks.
Release Notes:
- N/A
This is a first step towards allowing you to edit remote projects
directly over SSH. We'll start with a pretty bare-bones feature set, and
incrementally add further features.
### Todo
Distribution
* [x] Build nightly releases of `zed-remote-server` binaries
* [x] linux (arm + x86)
* [x] mac (arm + x86)
* [x] Build stable + preview releases of `zed-remote-server`
* [x] download and cache remote server binaries as needed when opening
ssh project
* [x] ensure server has the latest version of the binary
Auth
* [x] allow specifying password at the command line
* [x] auth via ssh keys
* [x] UI password prompt
Features
* [x] upload remote server binary to server automatically
* [x] opening directories
* [x] tracking file system updates
* [x] opening, editing, saving buffers
* [ ] file operations (rename, delete, create)
* [ ] git diffs
* [ ] project search
Release Notes:
- N/A
---------
Co-authored-by: Piotr Osiewicz <24362066+osiewicz@users.noreply.github.com>
Allows Zed to open custom `zed://` links (redirects from
https://zed.dev/channels) on Linux used XDG MIME types.
This PR also allows the CLI to be able to open Zed (`zed://`) URIs
directly instead of executing the main executable in
`/usr/libexec/zed-editor`.
Release Notes:
- Linux: Allow `zed.dev/channel` (`zed://`) URIs to open on Linux
- CLI: Ability to open URIs from the command line
---------
Co-authored-by: Conrad Irwin <conrad.irwin@gmail.com>
This fixes#13360 by adding fallback directories that are searched by
the CLI if the main executable cannot be found in the `libexec`
directory.
Release Notes:
- Added the fallback directories `lib/zed` and `lib/zed-editor` for the
main executable search in the CLI
([#13360](https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/issues/13360)).
---------
Co-authored-by: Conrad Irwin <conrad.irwin@gmail.com>
This PR replaces the `lazy_static!` usages in the `paths` crate with
`OnceLock` from the standard library.
This allows us to drop the `lazy_static` dependency from this crate.
The paths are now exposed as accessor functions that reference a private
static value.
Release Notes:
- N/A
This PR extracts the definition of the various Zed paths out of `util`
and into a new `paths` crate.
`util` is for generic utils, while these paths are Zed-specific. For
instance, `gpui` depends on `util`, and it shouldn't have knowledge of
these paths, since they are only used by Zed.
Release Notes:
- N/A
Supersedes https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/pull/12659
Fixes https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/issues/12588
One of Zed's core features is our collaboration software. As such, it is
important that we notify the user when their RPC protocol is out of
date, and how to update it. This PR adds a mechanism to replace the
existing auto updater with a message explaining how to update Zed for
this environment.
Release Notes:
- N/A
Fixes#12585
This changes the expectations for installed binaries on linux based on
work
that @jirutka has done for Alpine.
In particular, we now put the cli in place as `bin/zed` and the zed
binary as
`libexec/zed-editor`, and assume that packagers do the same.
cc @someone13574
Release notes:
- N/A
---------
Co-authored-by: Mikayla <mikayla@zed.dev>
ping #6687
This is the third iteration of this PR ([v2
here](https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/pull/11949)) and uses a
different approach to the first two (the process wrapper lib was a
maintainability nightmare). While the first two attempted to spawn the
necessary processes using flatpak-spawn and host-spawn from the app
inside the sandbox, this version first spawns the cli binary which then
restart's itself *outside* of the sandbox using flatpak-spawn. The
restarted cli process than can call the bundled app binary normally,
with no need for flatpak-spawn because it is already outside of the
sandbox. This is done instead of keeping the cli in the sandbox because
ipc becomes very difficult and broken when trying to do it across the
sandbox.
Gnome software (example using nightly channel and release notes
generated using the script):
<img
src="https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/assets/81528246/6391d217-0f44-4638-9569-88c46e5fc4ba"
width="600"/>
TODO in this PR:
- [x] Bundle libs.
- [x] Cleanup release note converter.
Future work:
- [ ] Auto-update dialog
- [ ] Flatpak auto-update (complete 'Auto-update dialog' first)
- [ ] Experimental
[bundle](https://docs.flatpak.org/en/latest/single-file-bundles.html)
releases for feedback (?).
*(?) = Maybe / Request for feedback*
Release Notes:
- N/A
---------
Co-authored-by: Marshall Bowers <elliott.codes@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Mikayla Maki <mikayla.c.maki@gmail.com>
- [x] Build out cli on linux
- [x] Add support for --dev-server-token sent by the CLI
- [x] Package cli into the .tar.gz
- [x] Link the cli to ~/.local/bin in install.sh
Release Notes:
- linux: Add cli support for managing zed
With this commit, it is now possible to invoke cli with a release
channel of bundle as an argument. E.g: `zed stable some_arguments` will
find CLI binary of Stable channel installed on your machine and invoke
it with `some_arguments` (so the first argument is essentially omitted).
Fixes#10851
Release Notes:
- CLI now accepts an optional name of release channel as it's first
argument. For example, `zed stable` will always use your Stable
installation's CLI. Trailing args are passed along.
When neither is specified, if you open a directory you get a new
workspace, otherwise files are added to your existing workspace.
With --new files are always opened in a new workspace
With --add directories are always added to an existing workspace
Fixes#9076Fixes#4861Fixes#5370
Release Notes:
- Added `-n/--new` and `-a/--add` to the zed CLI. When neither is
specified, if you open a directory you get a new workspace, otherwise
files are added to your existing workspace. With `--new` files are
always opened in a new workspace, with `--add` directories are always
added to an existing workspace.
([#9076](https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/issues/9096),
[#4861](https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/issues/4861),
[#5370](https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/issues/5370)).
See https://zed.dev/channel/gpui-536
Fixes https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/issues/9010
Fixes https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/issues/8883
Fixes https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/issues/8640
Fixes https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/issues/8598
Fixes https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/issues/8579
Fixes https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/issues/8363
Fixes https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/issues/8207
### Problem
After transitioning Zed to GPUI 2, we started noticing that interacting
with the mouse on many UI elements would lead to a pretty annoying
flicker. The main issue with the old approach was that hover state was
calculated based on the previous frame. That is, when computing whether
a given element was hovered in the current frame, we would use
information about the same element in the previous frame.
However, inspecting the previous frame tells us very little about what
should be hovered in the current frame, as elements in the current frame
may have changed significantly.
### Solution
This pull request's main contribution is the introduction of a new
`after_layout` phase when redrawing the window. The key idea is that
we'll give every element a chance to register a hitbox (see
`ElementContext::insert_hitbox`) before painting anything. Then, during
the `paint` phase, elements can determine whether they're the topmost
and draw their hover state accordingly.
We are also removing the ability to give an arbitrary z-index to
elements. Instead, we will follow the much simpler painter's algorithm.
That is, an element that gets painted after will be drawn on top of an
element that got painted earlier. Elements can still escape their
current "stacking context" by using the new `ElementContext::defer_draw`
method (see `Overlay` for an example). Elements drawn using this method
will still be logically considered as being children of their original
parent (for keybinding, focus and cache invalidation purposes) but their
layout and paint passes will be deferred until the currently-drawn
element is done.
With these changes we also reworked geometry batching within the
`Scene`. The new approach uses an AABB tree to determine geometry
occlusion, which allows the GPU to render non-overlapping geometry in
parallel.
### Performance
Performance is slightly better than on `main` even though this new
approach is more correct and we're maintaining an extra data structure
(the AABB tree).
![before_after](https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/assets/482957/c8120b07-1dbd-4776-834a-d040e569a71e)
Release Notes:
- Fixed a bug that was causing popovers to flicker.
---------
Co-authored-by: Nathan Sobo <nathan@zed.dev>
Co-authored-by: Thorsten <thorsten@zed.dev>
This PR moves the Clippy configuration up to the workspace level.
We're using the [`lints`
table](https://doc.rust-lang.org/cargo/reference/workspaces.html#the-lints-table)
to configure the Clippy ruleset in the workspace's `Cargo.toml`.
Each crate in the workspace now has the following in their own
`Cargo.toml` to inherit the lints from the workspace:
```toml
[lints]
workspace = true
```
This allows for configuring rust-analyzer to show Clippy lints in the
editor by using the following configuration in your Zed `settings.json`:
```json
{
"lsp": {
"rust-analyzer": {
"initialization_options": {
"check": {
"command": "clippy"
}
}
}
}
```
Release Notes:
- N/A
This PR sets up a `cargo xtask clippy` command for running `cargo
clippy` with our defined set of options.
The intent is to make this easier to manage as we start enabling more
Clippy rules.
Release Notes:
- N/A
This practice makes it difficult to locate todo!s in my code when I'm
working. Let's take out the bang if we want to keep doing this.
Release Notes:
- N/A
This is a follow up to #7945. The current behaviour reads the locale and
infers from that which type of time format should be used (12 hour/24
hour).
However, in macOS you can override this behaviour, e.g. you can use
en_US locale but still use the 24 hour clock format (Can be customized
under Settings > General > Date & Format > 24-hour time). You can even
customize the date format.
This PR uses the macOS specific `CFDateFormatter` API, which outputs
time format strings, that respect those settings.
Partially fixes#7956 (as its not implemented for linux)
Release Notes:
- Added localization support for all macOS specific date and time
configurations in chat
Before the change to `script/clippy`, bash ignored first `clippy`
invocation failure and CI moved on with Linux errors and warnings
emitted.
Release Notes:
- N/A
---------
Co-authored-by: Mikayla Maki <mikayla@zed.dev>
- [x] Fill in GPL license text.
- [x] live_kit_client depends on live_kit_server as non-dev dependency,
even though it seems to only be used for tests. Is that an issue?
Release Notes:
- N/A