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lib.rs
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//! Cross-platform terminal screen clearing.
//!
//! This library provides a set of ways to clear a screen, plus a “best effort” convenience function
//! to do the right thing most of the time.
//!
//! Unlike many cross-platform libraries, this one exposes every available choice all the time, and
//! only the convenience function varies based on compilation target or environmental factors.
//!
//! 90% of the time, you’ll want to use the convenience short-hand:
//!
//! ```no_run
//! clearscreen::clear().expect("failed to clear screen");
//! ```
//!
//! For anything else, refer to the [`ClearScreen`] enum.
//!
//! If you are supporting Windows in any capacity, the [`is_windows_10()`] documentation is
//! **required reading**.
#![doc(html_favicon_url = "https://watchexec.github.io/logo:clearscreen.svg")]
#![doc(html_logo_url = "https://watchexec.github.io/logo:clearscreen.svg")]
#![warn(missing_docs)]
use std::{
borrow::Cow,
env,
io::{self, Write},
process::{Command, ExitStatus},
};
use terminfo::{
capability::{self, Expansion},
expand::{Context, Parameter},
Capability, Database, Value,
};
use thiserror::Error;
use which::which;
/// Ways to clear the screen.
///
/// There isn’t a single way to clear the (terminal/console) screen. Not only are there several
/// techniques to achieve the outcome, there are differences in the way terminal emulators intepret
/// some of these techniques, as well as platform particularities.
///
/// In addition, there are other conditions a screen can be in that might be beneficial to reset,
/// such as when a TUI application crashes and leaves the terminal in a less than useful state.
///
/// Finally, a terminal may have scrollback, and this can be kept as-is or cleared as well.
///
/// Your application may need one particular clearing method, or it might offer several options to
/// the user, such as “hard” and “soft” clearing. This library makes no assumption and no judgement
/// on what is considered hard, soft, or something else: that is your responsibility to determine in
/// your context.
///
/// For most cases, you should use [`ClearScreen::default()`] to select the most appropriate method.
///
/// In any event, once a way is selected, call [`clear()`][ClearScreen::clear()] to apply it.
///
/// # Example
///
/// ```no_run
/// # use clearscreen::ClearScreen;
/// ClearScreen::default().clear().expect("failed to clear the screen");
/// ```
#[derive(Clone, Copy, Debug, PartialEq, Eq)]
#[non_exhaustive]
pub enum ClearScreen {
/// Does both [`TerminfoScreen`][ClearScreen::TerminfoScreen] and
/// [`TerminfoScrollback`][ClearScreen::TerminfoScrollback], in this order, but skips the
/// scrollback reset if the capability isn’t available.
///
/// This is essentially what the [`clear`] command on unix does.
/// [`clear`]: https://invisible-island.net/ncurses/man/clear.1.html
Terminfo,
/// Looks up the `clear` capability in the terminfo (from the TERM env var), and applies it.
///
/// A non-hashed terminfo database is required (this is a [terminfo crate] limitation), such as
/// the one provided with ncurses.
///
/// [terminfo crate]: https://lib.rs/crates/terminfo
TerminfoScreen,
/// Looks up the `E3` (Erase Scrollback) capability in the terminfo (from the TERM env var), and applies it.
///
/// The same terminfo limitation applies as for [`TerminfoScreen`][ClearScreen::TerminfoScreen].
TerminfoScrollback,
/// Performs a terminfo-driven terminal reset sequence.
///
/// This prints whichever are available of the **rs1**, **rs2**, **rs3**, and **rf** sequences.
/// If none of these are available, it prints whichever are available of the **is1**, **is2**,
/// **is3**, and **if** sequences. If none are available, an error is returned.
///
/// This generally issues at least an `ESC c` sequence, which resets all terminal state to
/// default values, and then may issue more sequences to reset other things or enforce a
/// particular kind of state. See [`XtermReset`][ClearScreen::XtermReset] for a description of
/// what XTerm does, as an example.
///
/// Note that this is _not_ analogous to what `tput reset` does: to emulate that, issuing first
/// one of VtCooked/VtWellDone/WindowsCooked followed by this variant will come close.
///
/// The same terminfo limitation applies as for [`TerminfoScreen`][ClearScreen::TerminfoScreen].
TerminfoReset,
/// Prints clear screen and scrollback sequence as if TERM=xterm.
///
/// This does not look up the correct sequence in the terminfo database, but rather prints:
///
/// - `CSI H` (Cursor Position 0,0), which sets the cursor position to 0,0.
/// - `CSI 2J` (Erase Screen), which erases the whole screen.
/// - `CSI 3J` (Erase Scrollback), which erases the scrollback (xterm extension).
XtermClear,
/// Prints the terminal reset sequence as if TERM=xterm.
///
/// This does not look up the correct sequence in the terminfo database, but rather prints:
///
/// - `ESC c` (Reset to Initial State), which nominally resets all terminal state to initial
/// values, but see the documentation for [`VtRis`][ClearScreen::VtRis].
/// - `CSI !p` (Soft Terminal Reset), which nominally does the same thing as RIS, but without
/// disconnecting the terminal data lines… which matters when you’re living in 1970.
/// - `CSI ?3l` (Reset to 80 Columns), which resets the terminal width to 80 columns, or more
/// accurately, resets the option that selects 132 column mode, to its default value of no.
/// I don’t know, man.
/// - `CSI ?4l` (Reset to Jump Scrolling), which sets the scrolling mode to jump. This is naught
/// to do with what we think of as “scrolling,” but rather it’s about the speed at which the
/// terminal will add lines to the screen. Jump mode means “give it to me as fast as it comes”
/// and Smooth mode means to do some buffering and output lines “at a moderate, smooth rate.”
/// - `CSI 4l` (Reset to Replace Mode), which sets the cursor writing mode to Replace, i.e.
/// overwriting characters at cursor position, instead of Insert, which pushes characters
/// under the cursor to the right.
/// - `ESC >` (Set Key Pad to Normal), which sets the keyboard’s numeric keypad to send “what’s
/// printed on the keys” i.e. numbers and the arithmetic symbols.
/// - `CSI ?69l` (Reset Left and Right Margins to the page), which sets the horizontal margins
/// to coincide with the page’s margins: nowadays, no margins.
XtermReset,
/// Calls the command `tput clear`.
///
/// That command most likely does what [`Terminfo`][ClearScreen::Terminfo] does internally, but
/// may work better in some cases, such as when the terminfo database on the system is hashed or
/// in a non-standard location that the terminfo crate does not find.
///
/// However, it relies on the `tput` command being available, and on being able to run commands.
TputClear,
/// Calls the command `tput reset`.
///
/// See the documentation above on [`TputClear`][ClearScreen::TputClear] for more details, save
/// that the equivalent is [`TerminfoReset`][ClearScreen::TerminfoReset].
TputReset,
/// Calls the command `cls`.
///
/// This is the Windows command to clear the screen. It has the same caveats as
/// [`TputClear`][ClearScreen::TputClear] does, but its internal mechanism is not known. Prefer
/// [`WindowsClear`][ClearScreen::WindowsClear] instead to avoid relying on an external command.
///
/// This will always attempt to run the command, regardless of compile target, which may have
/// unintended effects if the `cls` executable does something different on the platform.
Cls,
/// Sets the Windows Console to support VT escapes.
///
/// This sets the `ENABLE_VIRTUAL_TERMINAL_PROCESSING` bit in the console mode, which enables
/// support for the terminal escape sequences every other terminal uses. This is supported since
/// Windows 10, from the Threshold 2 Update in November 2015.
///
/// Does nothing on non-Windows targets.
WindowsVt,
/// Sets the Windows Console to support VT escapes and prints the clear sequence.
///
/// This runs [`WindowsVt`][ClearScreen::WindowsVt] and [`XtermClear`][ClearScreen::XtermClear],
/// in this order. This is described here:
/// https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/console/clearing-the-screen#example-1 as the
/// recommended clearing method for all new development, although we also reset the cursor
/// position.
///
/// While `WindowsVt` will do nothing on non-Windows targets, `XtermClear` will still run.
WindowsVtClear,
/// Uses Windows Console function to scroll the screen buffer and fill it with white space.
///
/// - Scrolls up one screenful
/// - Fills the buffer with whitespace and attributes set to default.
/// - Flushes the input buffer
/// - Sets the cursor position to 0,0
///
/// This is described here: https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/console/clearing-the-screen#example-2
/// as the equivalent to CMD.EXE's `cls` command.
///
/// Does nothing on non-Windows targets.
#[cfg(feature = "windows-console")]
WindowsConsoleClear,
/// Uses Windows Console function to blank the screen state.
///
/// - Fills the screen buffer with ` ` (space) characters
/// - Resets cell attributes over the entire buffer
/// - Flushes the input buffer
/// - Sets the cursor position to 0,0
///
/// This is described here: https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/console/clearing-the-screen#example-3
///
/// Does nothing on non-Windows targets.
#[cfg(feature = "windows-console")]
WindowsConsoleBlank,
/// Uses Windows Console function to disable raw mode.
///
/// Does nothing on non-Windows targets.
WindowsCooked,
/// Prints the RIS VT100 escape code: Reset to Initial State.
///
/// This is the `ESC c` or `1b 63` escape, which by spec is defined to reset the terminal state
/// to all initial values, which may be a range of things, for example as described in the VT510
/// manual: https://vt100.net/docs/vt510-rm/RIS
///
/// However, the exact behaviour is highly dependent on the terminal emulator, and some modern
/// terminal emulators do not always clear scrollback, for example Tmux and GNOME VTE.
VtRis,
/// Prints the CSI sequence to leave the Alternate Screen mode.
///
/// If the screen is in alternate screen mode, like how vim or a pager or another such rich TUI
/// application would do, this sequence will clear the alternate screen buffer, then revert the
/// terminal to normal mode, and restore the position of the cursor to what it was before
/// Alternate Screen mode was entered, assuming the proper sequence was used.
///
/// It will not clear the normal mode buffer.
///
/// This is useful when recovering from a TUI application which crashed without resetting state.
VtLeaveAlt,
/// Sets the terminal to cooked mode.
///
/// This attempts to switch the terminal to “cooked” mode, which can be thought of as the
/// opposite of “raw” mode, where the terminal does not respond to line discipline (which makes
/// carriage return, line feed, and general typing display out to screen, and translates Ctrl-C
/// to sending the SIGINT signal, etc) but instead passes all input to the controlling program
/// and only displays what it outputs explicitly.
///
/// There’s also an intermediate “cbreak” or “rare” mode which behaves like “cooked” but sends
/// each character one at a time immediately rather buffering and sending lines.
///
/// TUI applications such as editors and pagers often set raw mode to gain precise control of
/// the terminal state. If such a program crashes, it may not reset the terminal mode back to
/// the mode it found it in, which can leave the terminal behaving oddly or rendering it
/// completely unusable.
///
/// In truth, these terminal modes are a set of configuration bits that are given to the
/// `termios(3)` libc API, and control a variety of terminal modes. “Cooked” mode sets:
///
/// - Input BRKINT set: on BREAK, flush i/o queues and send a SIGINT to any running process.
/// - Input ICRNL set: translate Carriage Returns to New Lines on input.
/// - Input IGNPAR set: ignore framing and parity errors.
/// - Input ISTRIP set: strip off eigth bit.
/// - Input IXON set: enable XON/XOFF flow control on output.
/// - Output OPOST set: enable output processing.
/// - Local ICANON set: enable canonical mode (see below).
/// - Local ISIG set: when Ctrl-C, Ctrl-Q, etc are received, send the appropriate signal.
///
/// Canonical mode is really the core of “cooked” mode and enables:
///
/// - line buffering, so input is only sent to the underlying program when a line delimiter
/// character is entered (usually a newline);
/// - line editing, so ERASE (backspace) and KILL (remove entire line) control characters edit
/// the line before it is sent to the program;
/// - a maximum line length of 4096 characters (bytes).
///
/// When canonical mode is unset (when the bit is cleared), all input processing is disabled.
///
/// Due to how the underlying [`tcsetattr`] function is defined in POSIX, this may complete
/// without error if _any part_ of the configuration is applied, not just when all of it is set.
///
/// Note that you generally want [`VtWellDone`][ClearScreen::VtWellDone] instead.
///
/// Does nothing on non-Unix targets.
///
/// [`tcsetattr`]: https://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/functions/tcsetattr.html
VtCooked,
/// Sets the terminal to “well done” mode.
///
/// This is similar to [`VtCooked`][ClearScreen::VtCooked], but with a different, broader, mode
/// configuration which approximates a terminal’s initial state, such as is expected by a shell,
/// and clears many bits that should probably never be set (like the translation/mapping modes).
///
/// “Well done” mode is an invention of this library, inspired by several other sources such as
/// Golang’s goterm, the termios(3) and tput(1) manual pages, but not identical to any.
///
/// Notably most implementations read the terminal configuration bits and only modify that set,
/// whereas this library authoritatively writes the entire configuration from scratch.
///
/// It is a strict superset of [`VtCooked`][ClearScreen::VtCooked].
///
/// - Input BRKINT set: on BREAK, flush i/o queues and send a SIGINT to any running process.
/// - Input ICRNL set: translate Carriage Return to New Line on input.
/// - Input IUTF8 set: input is UTF-8 (Linux only, since 2.6.4).
/// - Input IGNPAR set: ignore framing and parity errors.
/// - Input IMAXBEL set: ring terminal bell when input queue is full (not implemented in Linux).
/// - Input ISTRIP set: strip off eigth bit.
/// - Input IXON set: enable XON/XOFF flow control on output.
/// - Output ONLCR set: do not translate Carriage Return to CR NL.
/// - Output OPOST set: enable output processing.
/// - Control CREAD set: enable receiver.
/// - Local ICANON set: enable canonical mode (see [`VtCooked`][ClearScreen::VtCooked]).
/// - Local ISIG set: when Ctrl-C, Ctrl-Q, etc are received, send the appropriate signal.
///
/// Does nothing on non-Unix targets.
VtWellDone,
}
impl Default for ClearScreen {
/// Detects the environment and makes its best guess as how to clear the screen.
///
/// This function’s behaviour (but not its type signature) may change without notice, as better
/// techniques appear. However, it will always strive to provide the best method. It will also
/// never have side-effects, and finding any such behaviour should be reported as a bug.
///
/// If you wish to make your own, the [`is_microsoft_terminal()`] and [`is_windows_10()`]
/// functions may be useful.
///
/// The [`ClearScreen`] variant selected is always in the “clear” behaviour side of things. If
/// you wish to only clear the screen and not the scrollback, or to perform a terminal reset, or
/// apply the other available clearing strategies, you’ll need to select what’s best yourself.
///
/// See the [TERMINALS.md file in the repo][TERMINALS.md] for research on many terminals as well
/// as the current result of this function for each terminal.
///
/// [TERMINALS.md]: https://github.com/watchexec/clearscreen/blob/main/TERMINALS.md
fn default() -> Self {
use env::var;
use std::ffi::OsStr;
fn varfull(key: impl AsRef<OsStr>) -> bool {
var(key).map_or(false, |s| !s.is_empty())
}
let term = var("TERM").ok();
let term = term.as_ref();
if cfg!(windows) {
return if is_microsoft_terminal() {
Self::XtermClear
} else if is_windows_10() {
Self::WindowsVtClear
} else if term.is_some() && varfull("TERMINFO") {
Self::Terminfo
} else if term.is_some() && which("tput").is_ok() {
Self::TputClear
} else {
Self::Cls
};
}
if let Some(term) = term {
// These VTE-based terminals support CSI 3J but their own terminfos don’t have E3
if (term.starts_with("gnome")
&& varfull("GNOME_TERMINAL_SCREEN")
&& varfull("GNOME_TERMINAL_SERVICE"))
|| term == "xfce"
|| term.contains("termite")
{
return Self::XtermClear;
}
// - SyncTERM does support the XtermClear sequence but does not clear the scrollback,
// and does not have a terminfo, so VtRis is the only option.
// - rxvt, when using its own terminfos, erases the screen instead of clearing and
// doesn’t clear scrollback. It supports and behave properly for the entire XtermClear
// sequence, but it also does the right thing with VtRis, and that seems more reliable.
// - Other variants of (u)rxvt do the same.
// - Kitty does as rxvt does here.
// - Tess does support the XtermClear sequence but has a weird scrollbar behaviour,
// which does not happen with VtRis.
// - Zutty does not support E3, and erases the buffer on clear like rxvt, but does work
// properly with VtRis.
// - Same behaviour with the multiplexer Zellij.
if term == "syncterm"
|| term.contains("rxvt")
|| term.contains("kitty")
|| var("CHROME_DESKTOP").map_or(false, |cd| cd == "tess.desktop")
|| varfull("ZUTTY_VERSION")
|| varfull("ZELLIJ")
{
return Self::VtRis;
}
// - screen supports CSI 3J only within the XtermClear sequence, without E3 capability.
// - Konsole handles CSI 3J correctly only within the XtermClear sequence.
if term.starts_with("screen") || term.starts_with("konsole") {
return Self::XtermClear;
}
// Default xterm* terminfo on macOS does not include E3, but many terminals support it.
if cfg!(target_os = "macos")
&& term.starts_with("xterm")
&& Database::from_env()
.map(|info| info.get::<ResetScrollback>().is_none())
.unwrap_or(true)
{
return Self::XtermClear;
}
if !term.is_empty() {
return Self::Terminfo;
}
}
Self::XtermClear
}
}
const ESC: &[u8] = b"\x1b";
const CSI: &[u8] = b"\x1b[";
const RIS: &[u8] = b"c";
impl ClearScreen {
/// Performs the clearing action, printing to stdout.
pub fn clear(self) -> Result<(), Error> {
let mut stdout = io::stdout();
self.clear_to(&mut stdout)
}
/// Performs the clearing action, printing to a given writer.
///
/// This allows to capture any escape sequences that might be printed, for example, but note
/// that it will not prevent actions taken via system APIs, such as the Windows, VtCooked, and
/// VtWellDone variants do.
///
/// For normal use, prefer [`clear()`].
pub fn clear_to(self, mut w: &mut impl Write) -> Result<(), Error> {
match self {
Self::Terminfo => {
let info = Database::from_env()?;
let mut ctx = Context::default();
if let Some(seq) = info.get::<capability::ClearScreen>() {
seq.expand().with(&mut ctx).to(&mut w)?;
w.flush()?;
} else {
return Err(Error::TerminfoCap("clear"));
}
if let Some(seq) = info.get::<ResetScrollback>() {
seq.expand().with(&mut ctx).to(&mut w)?;
w.flush()?;
}
}
Self::TerminfoScreen => {
let info = Database::from_env()?;
if let Some(seq) = info.get::<capability::ClearScreen>() {
seq.expand().to(&mut w)?;
w.flush()?;
} else {
return Err(Error::TerminfoCap("clear"));
}
}
Self::TerminfoScrollback => {
let info = Database::from_env()?;
if let Some(seq) = info.get::<ResetScrollback>() {
seq.expand().to(&mut w)?;
w.flush()?;
} else {
return Err(Error::TerminfoCap("E3"));
}
}
Self::TerminfoReset => {
let info = Database::from_env()?;
let mut ctx = Context::default();
let mut reset = false;
if let Some(seq) = info.get::<capability::Reset1String>() {
reset = true;
seq.expand().with(&mut ctx).to(&mut w)?;
}
if let Some(seq) = info.get::<capability::Reset2String>() {
reset = true;
seq.expand().with(&mut ctx).to(&mut w)?;
}
if let Some(seq) = info.get::<capability::Reset3String>() {
reset = true;
seq.expand().with(&mut ctx).to(&mut w)?;
}
if let Some(seq) = info.get::<capability::ResetFile>() {
reset = true;
seq.expand().with(&mut ctx).to(&mut w)?;
}
w.flush()?;
if reset {
return Ok(());
}
if let Some(seq) = info.get::<capability::Init1String>() {
reset = true;
seq.expand().with(&mut ctx).to(&mut w)?;
}
if let Some(seq) = info.get::<capability::Init2String>() {
reset = true;
seq.expand().with(&mut ctx).to(&mut w)?;
}
if let Some(seq) = info.get::<capability::Init3String>() {
reset = true;
seq.expand().with(&mut ctx).to(&mut w)?;
}
if let Some(seq) = info.get::<capability::InitFile>() {
reset = true;
seq.expand().with(&mut ctx).to(&mut w)?;
}
w.flush()?;
if !reset {
return Err(Error::TerminfoCap("reset"));
}
}
Self::XtermClear => {
const CURSOR_HOME: &[u8] = b"H";
const ERASE_SCREEN: &[u8] = b"2J";
const ERASE_SCROLLBACK: &[u8] = b"3J";
w.write_all(CSI)?;
w.write_all(CURSOR_HOME)?;
w.write_all(CSI)?;
w.write_all(ERASE_SCREEN)?;
w.write_all(CSI)?;
w.write_all(ERASE_SCROLLBACK)?;
w.flush()?;
}
Self::XtermReset => {
const STR: &[u8] = b"!p";
const RESET_WIDTH_AND_SCROLL: &[u8] = b"?3;4l";
const RESET_REPLACE: &[u8] = b"4l";
const RESET_KEYPAD: &[u8] = b">";
const RESET_MARGINS: &[u8] = b"?69l";
w.write_all(ESC)?;
w.write_all(RIS)?;
w.write_all(CSI)?;
w.write_all(STR)?;
w.write_all(CSI)?;
w.write_all(RESET_WIDTH_AND_SCROLL)?;
w.write_all(CSI)?;
w.write_all(RESET_REPLACE)?;
w.write_all(ESC)?;
w.write_all(RESET_KEYPAD)?;
w.write_all(CSI)?;
w.write_all(RESET_MARGINS)?;
w.flush()?;
}
Self::TputClear => {
let status = Command::new("tput").arg("clear").status()?;
if !status.success() {
return Err(Error::Command("tput clear", status));
}
}
Self::TputReset => {
let status = Command::new("tput").arg("reset").status()?;
if !status.success() {
return Err(Error::Command("tput reset", status));
}
}
Self::Cls => {
let status = Command::new("cmd.exe").arg("/C").arg("cls").status()?;
if !status.success() {
return Err(Error::Command("cls", status));
}
}
Self::WindowsVt => win::vt()?,
Self::WindowsVtClear => {
let vtres = win::vt();
Self::XtermClear.clear_to(w)?;
vtres?;
}
#[cfg(feature = "windows-console")]
Self::WindowsConsoleClear => win::clear()?,
#[cfg(feature = "windows-console")]
Self::WindowsConsoleBlank => win::blank()?,
Self::WindowsCooked => win::cooked()?,
Self::VtRis => {
w.write_all(ESC)?;
w.write_all(RIS)?;
w.flush()?;
}
Self::VtLeaveAlt => {
const LEAVE_ALT: &[u8] = b"?1049l";
w.write_all(CSI)?;
w.write_all(LEAVE_ALT)?;
w.flush()?;
}
Self::VtCooked => unix::vt_cooked()?,
Self::VtWellDone => unix::vt_well_done()?,
}
Ok(())
}
}
/// Shorthand for `ClearScreen::default().clear()`.
pub fn clear() -> Result<(), Error> {
ClearScreen::default().clear()
}
/// Detects Microsoft Terminal.
///
/// Note that this is only provided to write your own clearscreen logic and _should not_ be relied
/// on for other purposes, as it makes no guarantees of reliable detection, and its internal
/// behaviour may change without notice.
pub fn is_microsoft_terminal() -> bool {
env::var("WT_SESSION").is_ok()
}
/// Detects Windows ≥10.
///
/// As mentioned in the [`WindowsVt`][ClearScreen::WindowsVt] documentation, Windows 10 from the
/// Threshold 2 Update in November 2015 supports the `ENABLE_VIRTUAL_TERMINAL_PROCESSING` console
/// mode bit, which enables VT100/ECMA-48 escape sequence processing in the console. This in turn
/// makes clearing the console vastly easier and is the recommended mode of operation by Microsoft.
///
/// However, detecting Windows ≥10 is not trivial. To mitigate broken programs that incorrectly
/// perform version shimming, Microsoft has deprecated most ways to obtain the version of Windows by
/// making the relevant APIs _lie_ unless the calling executable [embeds a manifest that explicitely
/// opts-in to support Windows 10][manifesting].
///
/// To be clear, **this is the proper way to go**, and while this function tries, it may return
/// false under some Win10s if you don't manifest. If you are writing an application which uses this
/// library, or indeed any application targeting Windows at all, you should embed such a manifest
/// (and take that opportunity to opt-in to long path support, see e.g. [watchexec#163]). If you are
/// writing a library on top of this one, it is your responsibility to communicate this requirement
/// to your users.
///
/// It is important to remark that it is not possible to manifest twice. In plainer words,
/// **libraries _must not_ embed a manifest** as that will make it impossible for applications which
/// depend on them to embed their own manifest.
///
/// This function tries its best to detect Windows ≥10, and specifically, whether the mentioned mode
/// bit can be used. Critically, it leaves trying to set the bit as feature detection as a last
/// resort, such that _an error setting the bit_ is not confunded with _the bit not being supported_.
///
/// Note that this is only provided to write your own clearscreen logic and _should not_ be relied
/// on for other purposes, as it makes no guarantees of reliable detection, and its internal
/// behaviour may change without notice. Additionally, this will always return false if the library
/// was compiled for a non-Windows target, even if e.g. it’s running under WSL in a Windows 10 host.
///
/// TL;DR:
///
/// - Runs on Windows ≥10 without manifest and returns `true`: good, expected behaviour.
/// - Runs on Windows ≥10 without manifest and returns `false`: **not a bug**, please manifest.
/// - Runs on Windows ≥10 with manifest and returns `true`: good, expected behaviour.
/// - Runs on Windows ≥10 with manifest and returns `false`: **is a bug**, please report it.
/// - Runs on Windows <10 and returns `true`: **is a bug**, please report it. [ex #5]
/// - Runs on Windows <10 and returns `false`: good, expected behaviour.
///
/// [ex #5]: https://github.com/watchexec/clearscreen/issues/5
/// [manifesting]: https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/win32/sysinfo/targeting-your-application-at-windows-8-1
/// [watchexec#163]: https://github.com/watchexec/watchexec/issues/163
pub fn is_windows_10() -> bool {
win::is_windows_10()
}
/// Error type.
#[derive(Debug, Error)]
pub enum Error {
/// Any I/O error.
#[error(transparent)]
Io(#[from] io::Error),
/// A non-success exit status from a command.
#[error("{0}: {1}")]
Command(&'static str, ExitStatus),
/// Any nix (libc) error.
#[cfg(unix)]
#[error(transparent)]
Nix(#[from] nix::Error),
/// Any terminfo error.
#[error(transparent)]
Terminfo(#[from] terminfo::Error),
/// A missing terminfo capability.
#[error("required terminfo capability not available: {0}")]
TerminfoCap(&'static str),
/// A null-pointer error.
#[error("encountered a null pointer while reading {0}")]
NullPtr(&'static str),
}
#[cfg(unix)]
mod unix {
use super::Error;
use nix::{
libc::STDIN_FILENO,
sys::termios::{
tcgetattr, tcsetattr, ControlFlags, InputFlags, LocalFlags, OutputFlags,
SetArg::TCSANOW, Termios,
},
unistd::isatty,
};
use std::{fs::OpenOptions, os::unix::prelude::AsRawFd};
pub(crate) fn vt_cooked() -> Result<(), Error> {
write_termios(|t| {
t.input_flags.insert(
InputFlags::BRKINT
| InputFlags::ICRNL | InputFlags::IGNPAR
| InputFlags::ISTRIP | InputFlags::IXON,
);
t.output_flags.insert(OutputFlags::OPOST);
t.local_flags.insert(LocalFlags::ICANON | LocalFlags::ISIG);
})
}
pub(crate) fn vt_well_done() -> Result<(), Error> {
write_termios(|t| {
let mut inserts =
InputFlags::BRKINT
| InputFlags::ICRNL | InputFlags::IGNPAR
| InputFlags::IMAXBEL
| InputFlags::ISTRIP | InputFlags::IXON;
#[cfg(any(target_os = "android", target_os = "linux", target_os = "macos"))]
{
inserts |= InputFlags::IUTF8;
}
t.input_flags.insert(inserts);
t.output_flags
.insert(OutputFlags::ONLCR | OutputFlags::OPOST);
t.control_flags.insert(ControlFlags::CREAD);
t.local_flags.insert(LocalFlags::ICANON | LocalFlags::ISIG);
})
}
fn reset_termios(t: &mut Termios) {
t.input_flags.remove(InputFlags::all());
t.output_flags.remove(OutputFlags::all());
t.control_flags.remove(ControlFlags::all());
t.local_flags.remove(LocalFlags::all());
}
fn write_termios(f: impl Fn(&mut Termios)) -> Result<(), Error> {
if isatty(STDIN_FILENO)? {
let mut t = tcgetattr(STDIN_FILENO)?;
reset_termios(&mut t);
f(&mut t);
tcsetattr(STDIN_FILENO, TCSANOW, &t)?;
} else {
let tty = OpenOptions::new().read(true).write(true).open("/dev/tty")?;
let fd = tty.as_raw_fd();
let mut t = tcgetattr(fd)?;
reset_termios(&mut t);
f(&mut t);
tcsetattr(fd, TCSANOW, &t)?;
}
Ok(())
}
}
#[cfg(windows)]
mod win {
use super::Error;
use std::{convert::TryFrom, io, mem::size_of, ptr};
use winapi::{
shared::minwindef::{DWORD, FALSE},
um::{
consoleapi::{GetConsoleMode, SetConsoleMode},
handleapi::INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE,
lmapibuf::{NetApiBufferAllocate, NetApiBufferFree},
lmserver::{NetServerGetInfo, MAJOR_VERSION_MASK, SERVER_INFO_101, SV_PLATFORM_ID_NT},
lmwksta::{NetWkstaGetInfo, WKSTA_INFO_100},
processenv::GetStdHandle,
winbase::{VerifyVersionInfoW, STD_OUTPUT_HANDLE},
wincon::{
ENABLE_ECHO_INPUT, ENABLE_LINE_INPUT, ENABLE_PROCESSED_INPUT,
ENABLE_VIRTUAL_TERMINAL_PROCESSING,
},
winnt::{
VerSetConditionMask, HANDLE, OSVERSIONINFOEXW, POSVERSIONINFOEXW, ULONGLONG,
VER_GREATER_EQUAL, VER_MAJORVERSION, VER_MINORVERSION, VER_SERVICEPACKMAJOR,
},
},
};
#[cfg(feature = "windows-console")]
use winapi::um::{
wincon::{
FillConsoleOutputAttribute, FillConsoleOutputCharacterW, GetConsoleScreenBufferInfo,
ScrollConsoleScreenBufferW, SetConsoleCursorPosition, CONSOLE_SCREEN_BUFFER_INFO,
PCONSOLE_SCREEN_BUFFER_INFO,
},
wincontypes::{CHAR_INFO_Char, CHAR_INFO, COORD, SMALL_RECT},
winnt::SHORT,
};
fn console_handle() -> Result<HANDLE, Error> {
match unsafe { GetStdHandle(STD_OUTPUT_HANDLE) } {
INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE => Err(io::Error::last_os_error().into()),
handle => Ok(handle),
}
}
#[cfg(feature = "windows-console")]
fn buffer_info(console: HANDLE) -> Result<CONSOLE_SCREEN_BUFFER_INFO, Error> {
let csbi: PCONSOLE_SCREEN_BUFFER_INFO = ptr::null_mut();
if unsafe { GetConsoleScreenBufferInfo(console, csbi) } == FALSE {
return Err(io::Error::last_os_error().into());
}
if csbi.is_null() {
Err(Error::NullPtr("GetConsoleScreenBufferInfo"))
} else {
Ok(unsafe { ptr::read(csbi) })
}
}
pub(crate) fn vt() -> Result<(), Error> {
let stdout = console_handle()?;
let mut mode = 0;
if unsafe { GetConsoleMode(stdout, &mut mode) } == FALSE {
return Err(io::Error::last_os_error().into());
}
mode |= ENABLE_VIRTUAL_TERMINAL_PROCESSING;
if unsafe { SetConsoleMode(stdout, mode) } == FALSE {
return Err(io::Error::last_os_error().into());
}
Ok(())
}
// Ref https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/console/clearing-the-screen#example-2
#[cfg(feature = "windows-console")]
pub(crate) fn clear() -> Result<(), Error> {
let console = console_handle()?;
let csbi = buffer_info(console)?;
// Scroll the rectangle of the entire buffer.
let rect = SMALL_RECT {
Left: 0,
Top: 0,
Right: csbi.dwSize.X,
Bottom: csbi.dwSize.Y,
};
// Scroll it upwards off the top of the buffer with a magnitude of the entire height.
let target = COORD {
X: 0,
Y: (0 - csbi.dwSize.Y) as SHORT,
};
// Fill with empty spaces with the buffer’s default text attribute.
let mut space = CHAR_INFO_Char::default();
unsafe { *space.AsciiChar_mut() = b' ' as i8 };
let fill = CHAR_INFO {
Char: space,
Attributes: csbi.wAttributes,
};
// Do the scroll.
if unsafe { ScrollConsoleScreenBufferW(console, &rect, ptr::null(), target, &fill) }
== FALSE
{
return Err(io::Error::last_os_error().into());
}
// Move the cursor to the top left corner too.
let mut cursor = csbi.dwCursorPosition;
cursor.X = 0;
cursor.Y = 0;
if unsafe { SetConsoleCursorPosition(console, cursor) } == FALSE {
return Err(io::Error::last_os_error().into());
}
Ok(())
}
// Ref https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/console/clearing-the-screen#example-3
#[cfg(feature = "windows-console")]
pub(crate) fn blank() -> Result<(), Error> {
let console = console_handle()?;
// Fill the entire screen with blanks.
let csbi = buffer_info(console)?;
let buffer_size = csbi.dwSize.X * csbi.dwSize.Y;
let home_coord = COORD { X: 0, Y: 0 };
if FALSE
== unsafe {
FillConsoleOutputCharacterW(
console,
b' ' as u16,
u32::try_from(buffer_size).unwrap_or(0),
home_coord,
ptr::null_mut(),
)
} {
return Err(io::Error::last_os_error().into());
}
// Set the buffer's attributes accordingly.
let csbi = buffer_info(console)?;
if FALSE
== unsafe {
FillConsoleOutputAttribute(
console,
csbi.wAttributes,
u32::try_from(buffer_size).unwrap_or(0),
home_coord,
ptr::null_mut(),
)
} {
return Err(io::Error::last_os_error().into());
}
// Put the cursor at its home coordinates.
if unsafe { SetConsoleCursorPosition(console, home_coord) } == FALSE {
return Err(io::Error::last_os_error().into());
}
Ok(())
}
const ENABLE_COOKED_MODE: DWORD =
ENABLE_ECHO_INPUT | ENABLE_LINE_INPUT | ENABLE_PROCESSED_INPUT;
pub(crate) fn cooked() -> Result<(), Error> {
let stdout = console_handle()?;
let mut mode = 0;
if unsafe { GetConsoleMode(stdout, &mut mode) } == FALSE {
return Err(io::Error::last_os_error().into());
}
mode |= ENABLE_COOKED_MODE;
if unsafe { SetConsoleMode(stdout, mode) } == FALSE {
return Err(io::Error::last_os_error().into());
}
Ok(())
}
// I hope someone searches for this one day and gets mad at me for making their life harder.
const ABRACADABRA_THRESHOLD: (u8, u8) = (0x0A, 0x00);
// proper way, requires manifesting
#[inline]
fn um_verify_version() -> bool {
let condition_mask: ULONGLONG = unsafe {
VerSetConditionMask(
VerSetConditionMask(
VerSetConditionMask(0, VER_MAJORVERSION, VER_GREATER_EQUAL),
VER_MINORVERSION,
VER_GREATER_EQUAL,
),
VER_SERVICEPACKMAJOR,
VER_GREATER_EQUAL,
)
};
let mut osvi = OSVERSIONINFOEXW {
dwMinorVersion: ABRACADABRA_THRESHOLD.1 as _,
dwMajorVersion: ABRACADABRA_THRESHOLD.0 as _,
wServicePackMajor: 0,
..OSVERSIONINFOEXW::default()
};
let ret = unsafe {
VerifyVersionInfoW(
&mut osvi as POSVERSIONINFOEXW,
VER_MAJORVERSION | VER_MINORVERSION | VER_SERVICEPACKMAJOR,
condition_mask,
)
};