Expose the terminal Style struct to the C API as GhosttyStyle, a
sized struct with foreground, background, and underline colors
(as tagged unions) plus boolean text decoration flags.
Add ghostty_style_default() to obtain the default style and
ghostty_style_is_default() to check whether a style has all
default values. Wire both through c/style.zig, main.zig, and
lib_vt.zig with the corresponding header in vt/style.h.
Add a typed data query API to the terminal C interface, following
the same OutType pattern used by the OSC command data API. The new
ghostty_terminal_get function takes a GhosttyTerminalData tag and
an output pointer, returning GhosttyResult.
Currently exposes cols, rows, cursor x/y position, and cursor
pending wrap state. The GhosttyTerminalData enum is placed with the
other types in the header (before functions) per the ordering
convention.
Add ghostty_size_report_encode() to libghostty-vt, following the
same pattern as focus encoding: a single stateless function that
writes a terminal size report escape sequence into a caller-provided
buffer.
The size_report.zig Style enum and Size struct now use lib.Enum and
lib.Struct so the types are automatically C-compatible when building
with c_abi, eliminating the need for duplicate type definitions in
the C wrapper. The C wrapper in c/size_report.zig re-exports these
types directly and provides the callconv(.c) encode entry point.
Supports mode 2048 in-band reports and XTWINOPS responses (CSI 14 t,
CSI 16 t, CSI 18 t).
Add ghostty_mode_report_encode() which encodes a DECRPM response
sequence into a caller-provided buffer. The function takes a mode
tag, a report state integer, an output buffer, and writes the
appropriate CSI sequence (with ? prefix for DEC private modes).
The Zig-side ReportState is a non-exhaustive c_int enum that uses
std.meta.intToEnum for safe conversion to the internal type,
returning GHOSTTY_INVALID_VALUE on overflow. The C header exposes
a GhosttyModeReportState enum with named constants for the five
standard DECRPM state values.
Add modes.h with GhosttyModeTag (uint16_t) matching the Zig ModeTag
packed struct layout, along with inline helpers for constructing and
inspecting mode tags. Provide GHOSTTY_MODE_* macros for all 39
built-in modes (4 ANSI, 35 DEC), parenthesized for safety.
Add ghostty_terminal_mode_get and ghostty_terminal_mode_set to
terminal.h, both returning GhosttyResult so that null terminals
and unknown mode tags return GHOSTTY_INVALID_VALUE. The get function
writes its result through a bool out-parameter.
Add a note in the Zig mode entries reminding developers to update
modes.h when adding new modes.
Add focus event encoding (CSI I / CSI O) to the libghostty-vt public
API, following the same patterns as key and mouse encoding.
The focus Event enum uses lib.Enum for C ABI compatibility. The C API
provides ghostty_focus_encode() which writes into a caller-provided
buffer and returns GHOSTTY_OUT_OF_SPACE with the required size when
the buffer is too small.
Also update key and mouse encoders to return GHOSTTY_OUT_OF_SPACE
instead of GHOSTTY_OUT_OF_MEMORY for buffer-too-small errors,
reserving OUT_OF_MEMORY for actual allocation failures. Update all
corresponding header documentation.
Export mouse_encode types and functions through the lib_vt public
input API, mirroring the existing key encoding exports. This adds
MouseAction, MouseButton, MouseEncodeOptions, MouseEncodeEvent,
and encodeMouse so that consumers of the Zig module can encode
mouse events without reaching into internal packages.
Expose the internal mouse encoding functionality through the C API,
following the same pattern as the existing key encoding API. This
allows external consumers of libvt to encode mouse events into
terminal escape sequences (X10, UTF-8, SGR, URxvt, SGR-Pixels).
The API is split into two opaque handle types: GhosttyMouseEvent
for building normalized mouse events (action, button, modifiers,
position) and GhosttyMouseEncoder for converting those events into
escape sequences. The encoder is configured via a setopt interface
supporting tracking mode, output format, renderer geometry, button
state, and optional motion deduplication by last cell.
Encoder state can also be bulk-configured from a terminal handle
via ghostty_mouse_encoder_setopt_from_terminal. Failed encodes due
to insufficient buffer space report the required size without
mutating deduplication state.
Expose the key encoder Options.fromTerminal function to the C API as
ghostty_key_encoder_setopt_from_terminal. This lets C callers sync all
terminal-derived encoding options (cursor key application mode, keypad
mode, alt escape prefix, modifyOtherKeys, and Kitty flags) in a single
call instead of setting each option individually.
Rename the existing format function to format_buf to clarify that it
writes into a caller-provided buffer. Add a new format_alloc variant
that allocates the output buffer internally using the provided
allocator (or the default if NULL). The caller receives the allocated
pointer and length and is responsible for freeing it.
This is useful for consumers that do not know the required buffer size
ahead of time and want to avoid the two-pass query-then-format pattern
needed with format_buf.
This adds HTML formatting capabilities to the formatter package. HTML is
emitted as inline styles. For palette indexes, direct RGB is emitted if
we have access to a palette; otherwise, we fall back to CSS variables.
This isn't exposed to end users yet, but will enable copy as html
features. This is available in libghostty.
Fixes#9395
**AI disclosure:** I used AI (Amp) to help me write tests, but the
implementation was done manually. I reviewed everything.
This exposes the SGR parser to the C and Wasm APIs. An example is shown
in c-vt-sgr.
Compressed example:
```c
#include <assert.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <ghostty/vt.h>
int main() {
// Create parser
GhosttySgrParser parser;
assert(ghostty_sgr_new(NULL, &parser) == GHOSTTY_SUCCESS);
// Parse: ESC[1;31m (bold + red foreground)
uint16_t params[] = {1, 31};
assert(ghostty_sgr_set_params(parser, params, NULL, 2) == GHOSTTY_SUCCESS);
printf("Parsing: ESC[1;31m\n\n");
// Iterate through attributes
GhosttySgrAttribute attr;
while (ghostty_sgr_next(parser, &attr)) {
switch (attr.tag) {
case GHOSTTY_SGR_ATTR_BOLD:
printf("✓ Bold enabled\n");
break;
case GHOSTTY_SGR_ATTR_FG_8:
printf("✓ Foreground color: %d (red)\n", attr.value.fg_8);
break;
default:
break;
}
}
ghostty_sgr_free(parser);
return 0;
}
```
**AI disclosure:** Amp wrote most of the C headers, but I verified it
all. https://ampcode.com/threads/T-d9f145cb-e6ef-48a8-ad63-e5fc85c0d43e
This adds a set of Wasm convenience functions to ease memory management.
These are all prefixed with `ghostty_wasm` and are documented as part of
the standard Doxygen docs.
I also added a very simple single-page HTML example that demonstrates
how to use the Wasm module for key encoding.
This also adds a bunch of safety checks to the C API to verify that
valid values are actually passed to the function. This is an easy to hit
bug.
**AI disclosure:** The example is AI-written with Amp. I read through
all the code and understand it but I can't claim there isn't a better
way, I'm far from a JS expert. It is simple and works currently though.
Happy to see improvements if anyone wants to contribute.
This makes `libghostty-vt` build for freestanding wasm targets (aka a
browser) and produce a `ghostty-vt.wasm` file. This exports the same C
API that libghostty-vt does.
This commit specifically makes the changes necessary for the build to
build properly and for us to run the build in CI. We don't yet actually
try using it...
This modernizes `KeyEncoder` to a new `std.Io.Writer`-based API.
Additionally, instead of a single struct, it is now an `encode` function
that takes a series of more focused options. This is more idiomatic Zig
while also making it easier to expose via libghostty-vt.
libghostty-vt also gains access to key encoding APIs.
This moves our paste logic to `src/input` in preparation for exposing
this as part of libghostty-vt. This yields an immediate benefit of
unit tests for paste encoding.
Additionally, we were able to remove one allocation on every unbracketed
paste path unless the input specifically contains a newline. Unlikely to
be noticable, but nice.
NOTE: This also includes one change in behavior: we no longer encode
`\r\n` and a single `\r`, but as a duplicate `\r\r`. This matches xterm
behavior and I don't think will result in any issues since duplicate
carriage returns should do nothing in well-behaved terminals.
This also changes OSC strings to be null-terminated to ease lib-vt
integration. This shouldn't have any practical effect on terminal
performance, but it does lower the maximum length of OSC strings by 1
since we always reserve space for the null terminator.
Fixes various issues:
- C ABI detection was faulty, which caused some Zig programs to use
the C ABI mode and some C programs not to. Let's be explicit.
- Unit tests now tests C ABI mode.
- Build binary no longer rebuilds on any terminal change (a regression).
- Zig programs can choose to depend on the C ABI version of the terminal
lib by using the `ghostty-vt-c` module.