This allows the user to select different connections from the terminal
block. Some features include:
- a status bar at the top of the term block that shows your current
connection
- an icon next to the status bar that shows whether the connection is
currently connected
- the ability to click the status bar and type in a new connection in
order to change the current connection
---------
Co-authored-by: sawka <mike.sawka@gmail.com>
This makes it possible to send wsh commands from wsh on a remote session
to wavesrv running locally. The exact behavior of running those commands
isn't implemented, but the underlying interface is added here.
This brings over a simplified version of the open ai feature from the
previous app but in widget form. It still needs some work to reach
parity with that version, but this includes all of the basic building
blocks to get that working.
lots of changes. new wshrpc implementation. unify websocket, web,
blockcontroller, domain sockets, and terminal inputs to all use the new
rpc system.
lots of moving files around to deal with circular dependencies
use new wshrpc as a client in wsh cmd
I am updating the layout node setup to write to its own wave object.
The existing setup requires me to plumb the layout updates through every
time the tab gets updated, which produces a lot of annoying and
unintuitive design patterns. With this new setup, the tab object doesn't
get written to when the layout changes, only the layout object will get
written to. This prevents collisions when both the tab object and the
layout node object are getting updated, such as when a new block is
added or deleted.