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>
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>
As part of the recent changes to keyboard support, ime_key is no longer
populated by the IME; but instead by the keyboard.
As part of #20877 I changed some code to assume that falling back to key
was
ok, but this was not ok; instead we need to populate this more similarly
to how
it was done before #20336.
The alternative fix could be to instead of simulating these events in
our own
code to push a fake native event back to the platform input handler.
Closes #ISSUE
Release Notes:
- Fixed a bug where tapping `shift` coudl type "shift" if you had a
binding on "shift shift"
Issues found:
* audio does not work well with various set-ups using USB
* switching audio during initial join may leave the client with no audio
at all
* audio streaming is done on the main thread, beachballing certain
set-ups
* worse screenshare quality (seems that there's no dynamic scaling
anymore, compared to the Swift SDK)
This reverts commit 1235d0808e.
Release Notes:
- N/A
See https://github.com/livekit/rust-sdks/pull/355
Todo:
* [x] make `call` / `live_kit_client` crates use the livekit rust sdk
* [x] create a fake version of livekit rust API for integration tests
* [x] capture local audio
* [x] play remote audio
* [x] capture local video tracks
* [x] play remote video tracks
* [x] tests passing
* bugs
* [x] deafening does not work
(https://github.com/livekit/rust-sdks/issues/359)
* [x] mute and speaking status are not replicated properly:
(https://github.com/livekit/rust-sdks/issues/358)
* [x] **linux** - crash due to symbol conflict between WebRTC's
BoringSSL and libcurl's openssl
(https://github.com/livekit/rust-sdks/issues/89)
* [x] **linux** - libwebrtc-sys adds undesired dependencies on `libGL`
and `libXext`
* [x] **windows** - linker error, maybe related to the C++ stdlib
(https://github.com/livekit/rust-sdks/issues/364)
```
libwebrtc_sys-54978c6ad5066a35.rlib(video_frame.obj) : error LNK2038:
mismatch detected for 'RuntimeLibrary': value 'MT_StaticRelease' doesn't
match value 'MD_DynamicRelease' in
libtree_sitter_yaml-df6b0adf8f009e8f.rlib(2e40c9e35e9506f4-scanner.o)
```
* [x] audio problems
Release Notes:
- Switch from Swift to Rust LiveKit SDK 🦀
---------
Co-authored-by: Mikayla Maki <mikayla@zed.dev>
Co-authored-by: Conrad Irwin <conrad@zed.dev>
Co-authored-by: Kirill Bulatov <kirill@zed.dev>
Co-authored-by: Michael Sloan <michael@zed.dev>
Closes #16343Closes#10972
Release Notes:
- (breaking change) On macOS when using a keyboard that supports an
extended Latin character set (e.g. French, German, ...) keyboard
shortcuts are automatically updated so that they can be typed without
`option`. This fixes several long-standing problems where some keyboards
could not type some shortcuts.
- This mapping works the same way as
[macOS](https://developer.apple.com/documentation/swiftui/view/keyboardshortcut(_:modifiers:localization:)).
For example on a German keyboard shortcuts like `cmd->` become `cmd-:`,
`cmd-[` and `cmd-]` become `cmd-ö` and `cmd-ä`. This mapping happens at
the time keyboard layout files are read so the keybindings are visible
in the command palette. To opt out of this behavior for your custom
keyboard shortcuts, set `"use_layout_keys": true` in your binding
section. For the mappings used for each layout [see
here](a890df1863/crates/settings/src/key_equivalents.rs (L7)).
---------
Co-authored-by: Will <will@zed.dev>
This will allow us to compile debug builds of the remote-server for a
different architecture than the one we are developing on.
This also adds a CI step for building our remote server with minimal
dependencies.
Release Notes:
- N/A
Closes #14089, #14416, #15970, #17230, #18485
Release Notes:
- Fixed some cases where Linux X11 mouse scrolling doesn't work at all
(#14089, ##15970, #17230)
- Fixed handling of switching between Linux X11 devices used for
scrolling (#14416, #18485)
Change details:
Also includes the commit from PR #18317 so I don't have to deal with
merge conflicts.
* Now uses valuator info from slave pointers rather than master. This
hopefully fixes remaining cases where scrolling is fully
broken. https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/issues/14089,
https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/issues/15970,
https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/issues/17230
* Per-device recording of "last scroll position" used to calculate
deltas. This meant that swithing scroll devices would cause a sudden
jump of scroll position, often to the beginning or end of the
file (https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/issues/14416).
* Re-queries device metadata when devices change, so that newly
plugged in devices will work, and re-use of device-ids don't use old
metadata with a new device.
* xinput 2 documentation describes support for multiple master
devices. I believe this implementation will support that, since now it
just uses `DeviceInfo` from slave devices. The concept of master
devices is only used in registering for events.
* Uses popcount+bit masking to resolve axis indexes, instead of
iterating bit indices.
---------
Co-authored-by: Thorsten Ball <mrnugget@gmail.com>
This changes the workspace/session serialization to also persist the
order of windows across restarts.
Release Notes:
- Improved restoring of windows across restarts: the order of the
windows is now also restored. That means windows that were in the
foreground when Zed was quit will be in the foreground after restart.
(Right now only supported on Linux/X11, not on Linux/Wayland.)
Demo:
https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/0b8162f8-f06d-43df-88d3-c45d8460fb68
I decided to remove the GPUI APIs since `chrono` already provides this
functionality, and is already been used for this purpose in other parts
of the code (e.g.
[here](80402a6840/crates/zed/src/main.rs (L756))
or
[here](80402a6840/crates/ui/src/utils/format_distance.rs (L258)))
These usages end up calling the `time_format` crate, which takes in a
`UtcOffset`. It's probably cleaner to rewrite the crate to take in
`chrono` types, but that would require rewriting most of the code there.
Release Notes:
- linux: Use local time zone in chat and Git blame
This PR consists of two main changes:
1. The first commit changes the `open` crate for opening URLs/paths for
the `OpenURI` desktop portal. This fixes the activation token not being
passed to programs (at least on KDE).
2. The second commit implements the window `activate()` API on Wayland.
This allows KWin and Mutter to show a visual indicator when the window
is requesting attention. (see
https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/issues/12557)

Release Notes:
- N/A
This has been bugging me for a while. If you create a new file and then
save it, the dialogue would show the home directory and not the folder
that you were in.
This fixes it.
Release Notes:
- N/A
This PR adds support for full client side decorations on X11 and Wayland
TODO:
- [x] Adjust GPUI APIs to expose CSD related information
- [x] Implement remaining CSD features (Resizing, window border, window
shadow)
- [x] Integrate with existing background appearance and window
transparency
- [x] Figure out how to check if the window is tiled on X11
- [x] Implement in Zed
- [x] Repeatedly maximizing and unmaximizing can panic
- [x] Resizing is strangely slow
- [x] X11 resizing and movement doesn't work for this:
https://discord.com/channels/869392257814519848/1204679850208657418/1256816908519604305
- [x] The top corner can clip with current styling
- [x] Pressing titlebar buttons doesn't work
- [x] Not showing maximize / unmaximize buttons
- [x] Noisy transparency logs / surface transparency problem
https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/pull/13611#issuecomment-2201685030
- [x] Strange offsets when dragging the project panel
https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/pull/13611#pullrequestreview-2154606261
- [x] Shadow inset with `_GTK_FRAME_EXTENTS` doesn't respect tiling on
X11 (observe by snapping an X11 window in any direction)
Release Notes:
- N/A
---------
Co-authored-by: conrad <conrad@zed.dev>
Co-authored-by: Owen Law <81528246+someone13574@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: apricotbucket28 <71973804+apricotbucket28@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Conrad Irwin <conrad.irwin@gmail.com>
This changes the implementation of the X11 client to use `mio`, as a
polling mechanism, and a custom run loop instead of `calloop` and its
callback-based approach.
We're doing this for one big reason: more control over how we handle
events.
With `calloop` we don't have any control over which events are processed
when and how long they're processes for. For example: we could be
blasted with 150 input events from X11 and miss a frame while processing
them, but instead of then drawing a new frame, calloop could decide to
work off the runnables that were generated from application-level code,
which would then again cause us to be behind.
We kinda worked around some of that in
https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/pull/12839 but the problem still
persists.
So what we're doing here is to use `mio` as a polling-mechanism. `mio`
notifies us if there are X11 on the XCB connection socket to be
processed. We also use its timeout mechanism to make sure that we don't
wait for events when we should render frames.
On top of `mio` we now have a custom run loop that allows us to decide
how much time to spend on what — input events, rendering windows, XDG
events, runnables — and in what order we work things off.
This custom run loop is consciously "dumb": we render all windows at the
highest frame rate right now, because we want to keep things predictable
for now while we test this approach more. We can then always switch to
more granular timings. But considering that our loop runs and checks for
windows to be redrawn whenever there's an event, this is more an
optimization than a requirement.
One reason for why we're doing this for X11 but not for Wayland is due
to how peculiar X11's event handling is: it's asynchronous and by
default X11 generates synthetic events when a key is held down. That can
lead to us being flooded with input events if someone keeps a key
pressed.
So another optimization that's in here is inspired by [GLFW's X11 input
handling](b35641f4a3/src/x11_window.c (L1321-L1349)):
based on a heuristic we detect whether a `KeyRelease` event was
auto-generated and if so, we drop it. That essentially halves the amount
of events we have to process when someone keeps a key pressed.
Release Notes:
- N/A
---------
Co-authored-by: Conrad Irwin <conrad.irwin@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Conrad <conrad@zed.dev>
Release Notes:
- N/A
Fixed#13463 Fixed crash when the locale was non UTF-8 and fixed the
fallback locale.
Fixed#13010 Fixed crash when `compose.keysym()` was `XKB_KEY_NoSymbol`
I also extracted the `xkb_compose_state` to a single place
Fixes https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/issues/12054
Replaces the `copypasta`/`smithay-clipboard` implementation with a new,
custom one
TODO list:
- [x] Cleanup code
- [x] Remove `smithay-clipboard`
- [x] Add more mime types to the supported list
Release Notes:
- Fixed drag and drop on Gnome
- Fixed clipboard paste on Hyprland
TODO:
- [x] Finish GPUI changes on other operating systems
This is a largely internal change to how we report data to our
diagnostics and telemetry. This PR also includes an update to our blade
backend which allows us to report errors in a more useful way when
failing to initialize blade.
Release Notes:
- N/A
---------
Co-authored-by: Conrad Irwin <conrad.irwin@gmail.com>
The method has been tested on:
- Gnome 46 (Working)
- Gnome 40 (Not supported)
Tasks
- [x] Implements a draft which get and provides the user theme to
components which needs it
- [x] Implements a way to call the callback function when the theme is
updated
- [X] Cleans the code
Release notes:
- N/A
Fixes: #11651
Co-Authored-By: versecafe <147033096+versecafe@users.noreply.github.com>
Release Notes:
- Added a "New Window" item to the dock menu
([#11651](https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/issues/11651)).
---------
Co-authored-by: versecafe <147033096+versecafe@users.noreply.github.com>
If opening a url opens the first browser window the call does not return
completely blocking the ui until the browser window is closed. Using
spawn instead of status does not block, but we will loose the exitstatus
of the browser window.
Release Notes:
- N/A
Release Notes:
- N/A
Fixes#9207
Known Issues:
- [ ] ~~After launching Zed and immediately trying to change input
method, the input panel will appear at Point{0, 0}~~
- [ ] ~~`ime_handle_preedit` should not trigger `write_to_primary`~~
Move to other PR
- [ ] ~~Cursor is visually stuck at the end.~~ Move to other PR
Currently tested with KDE & fcitx5.
If you go to the file tree and press "x" (which is
"project_panel::RevealInFinder"). It will open the default file
manager(in my case nautilus). But on Linux it makes Zed unresponsive.
This fixes that.
Release Notes:
- Fixed Zed blocked after opening file manager in the file tree on
Linux.
This fixes restart after updates not working on Linux.
On Linux we can't reliably get the binary path after an update, because
the original binary was deleted and the path will contain ` (deleted)`.
See: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/69343
We *could* strip ` (deleted)` off, but that feels nasty. So instead we
save the original binary path, before we do the installation, then
restart.
Later on, we can also change this to be a _new_ binary path returned by
the installers, which we then have to start.
Release Notes:
- N/A
This implements `app_version` on Linux by using an optional,
compile-time `RELEASE_VERSION` env var that can be set.
We settled on the `RELEASE_VERSION` as the name, since it's similar to
`RELEASE_CHANNEL` which we use in Zed.
cc @ConradIrwin @mikayla-maki
Release Notes:
- N/A
Co-authored-by: Bennet <bennetbo@gmx.de>
This fixes a race-condition that showed up when trying to restart
Nightly/Preview/...
When running with these release channels, Zed tries to ensure that
there's only one instance of Zed running.
It does that by listening on a TCP socket to which other instances can
connect on start. If the other instance receives a message, it knows
that another Zed instance is running and exits.
On Linux, though, we ran into a race condition:
1. `kill -0`, which checks whether a process is still running, returns
an error, signalling that the old Zed process has exited
2. BUT: the process was still listening on the TCP port.
It seems like that on Linux, process resources aren't guaranteed to be
cleaned up as soon as signal handling stops working for a process.
The fix is to wait until the process is no longer listening on any TCP
sockets.
There's a slight downside to this: GPUI processes that never listen on
any TCP sockets now have to pay the cost of an additional `lsof` call
when restarting. We do think that it's a reasonable tradeoff for now
though, since the other options (extending the platform interface to
provide callbacks, sharing the listening port in the framework, ...)
seem wider-reaching only to fix a very local bug.
Release Notes:
- N/A
Co-authored-by: Bennet <bennetbo@gmx.de>
Fixed various small issues on Linux, mainly on Wayland.
Apart from the first commit (which should be self-describing), the other
commits have a description explaining the issue and what they do.
caadc58bea should fix
https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/issues/11037
Release Notes:
- N/A
Notable things I've had to fix due to 1.78:
- Better detection of unused items
- New clippy lint (`assigning_clones`) that points out places where assignment operations with clone rhs could be replaced with more performant `clone_into`
Release Notes:
- N/A
Since Wayland doesn't have a way for windows to activate themselves,
currently, when you click on a link in Zed, the browser window opens in
the background.
This PR implements the `xdg-activation` protocol to get an activation
token, which the browser can use to raise its window.
https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/assets/71973804/8b3456c0-89f8-4201-b1cb-633a149796b7
Release Notes:
- N/A