This adds the following connections changes:
- connections can be hidden from the dropdown in our internal
connections.json config
- `wsh ssh` -i will write identity files to the internal
connections.json config for that connection
- the internal connections.json config will also be used to get identity
files when connecting
- the internal connections.json config allows setting theme, fontsize,
and font for specific connections
- successful connections (including those using wsh ssh) are saved to
the internal connections.json config
- the connections.json config will be used to help pre-populate the
dropdown list
- adds an item to the dropdown to edit the connections config in an
ephemeral block
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Co-authored-by: Evan Simkowitz <esimkowitz@users.noreply.github.com>
There was still some flicker when nohover took effect before the tab
view actually switched. Now, we override the active tab in the tabbar
when the app is switching tabs. We also override active tab behavior so
that the close button is always visible while nohover is in effect. This
effectively removes the flickering
![image](https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/a4072368-b204-4eed-bb65-8e3884687f9a)
This functions very similarly to VSCode's pinned tab feature. To pin a
tab, you can right-click on it and select "Pin tab" from the context
menu. Once pinned, a tab will be fixed to the left-most edge of the tab
bar, in order of pinning. Pinned tabs can be dragged around like any
others. If you drag an unpinned tab into the pinned tabs section (any
index less than the highest-index pinned tab), it will be pinned. If you
drag a pinned tab out of the pinned tab section, it will be unpinned.
Pinned tabs' close button is replaced with a persistent pin button,
which can be clicked to unpin them. This adds an extra barrier to
accidentally closing a pinned tab. They can still be closed from the
context menu.
Ephemeral blocks can now be added to the LayoutModel for a tab. Only one
ephemeral block can exist at a time. It is placed above all other
blocks, including the magnified blocks.
Updates how magnified and ephemeral blocks overlay the other blocks.
Now, there's a blurred backdrop behind them that will obscure the other
blocks. As a result of this, the overlayed blocks are now translucent.
Adds new functionality on the backend that will merge any file from the
config directory that matches `<partName>.json` or `<partName>/*.json`
into the corresponding config part (presets, termthemes, etc.). This
lets us separate the AI presets into `presets/ai.json` so that we can
add a dropdown in the AI preset selector that will directly open the
file so a user can edit it more easily. Right now, this will create a
preview block in the layout, but in the future we can look into making
this block disconnected from the layout.
If you put AI presets in the regular presets.json file, it will still
work, since all the presets get merged. Same for any other config part.
Removes global atoms dependency from emain by moving WOS to grab the
globalAtoms from window, if present. Also removes interdependency
between wshrpcutil and wps
Also adds showmenubar setting for Windows and Linux
This migrates all remaining eventbus events sent over the websocket to
use the wps interface. WPS is more flexible for registering events and
callbacks and provides support for more reliable unsubscribes and
resubscribes.
Rather than try to track the transition state, which was proving
unreliable, I am just directly tracking the node state and determining
whether to debounce the inner rect based on whether the user has the
prefers-reduced-motion setting or query, whether the node is resizing,
and whether it's currently magnified. I'm then using the actual
animation time setting to determine how long to debounce.
Adds a new setting for the gap size between tiles in a layout. Also
updates the resize handle calculations so they are dynamically generated
based on the gap size. Also updates the styling for the resize handles
to be more robust.
This also updates the default gap size to 3px.
This also slims out the Block Frame padding so it is just enough that
the blocks don't overlap when there's no gap.
Adds a flag to the insert layout action to explicitly set the focus of a
newly inserted node. This also adds a flag in the starter layout to
focus on the terminal block.
This adds a new NodeModel, which can be passed from the TileLayout to
contained blocks. It contains all the layout data that the block should
care about, including focus status, whether a drag operation is
underway, whether the node is magnified, etc.
This also adds a focus stack for the layout, which will let the focus
switch to the last-focused node when the currently-focused one is
closed.
This also addresses a regression in the resize handles that caused them
to be offset from the cursor when dragged.
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Co-authored-by: sawka <mike.sawka@gmail.com>
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>
With this PR, Electron will generate a new authorization key that the Go
backend will look for in any incoming requests. The Electron backend
will inject this header with all requests to the backend to ensure no
additional work is required on the frontend.
This also adds a `fetchutil` abstraction that will use the Electron
`net` module when calls are made from the Electron backend to the Go
backend. When using the `node:fetch` module, Electron can't inject
headers to requests. The Electron `net` module is also faster than the
Node module.
This also breaks out platform functions in emain into their own file so
other emain modules can import them.
Adds a new setting that emulates the prefers-reduced-motion media query, allowing users to disable Wave animations without affecting other apps on their system. It also honors the prefers-reduced-motion query in case a system-level configuration is present.
This PR is a large refactoring of the layout code to move as much of the
layout state logic as possible into a unified model class, with atoms
and derived atoms to notify the display logic of changes. It also fixes
some latent bugs in the node resize code, significantly speeds up
response times for resizing and dragging, and sets us up to fully
replace the React-DnD library in the future.