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Mitchell Hashimoto 83104ff27a Convert terminal.Stream to use a tagged union, remove hasDecl (#9342)
This removes our `@hasDecl` usage from `terminal.Stream` and instead
uses a tagged union approach similar to what we already do for apprt
actions. The reasons to do this:

1. It is less magic. You don't get new functionality by magically
implementing a function.
2. It is safer. You can't typo a function name and Zig's exhaustive enum
handling will force you to handle all cases (even if most cases are
no-ops). This also helps you as at the implementor know when new
functionality pops up.
3. It is easier to integrate into C (for libghostty-vt). We can expose a
single tagged union type with a single callback rather than whatever the
previous mess was. This PR doesn't do this yet.

In addition, this PR adds in some helpers necessary to make it easier to
make C ABI compatible tagged unions. This lays the groundwork for our
libghostty-vt work but isn't exposed directly there yet. This PR has no
functional changes. Everything should behave identically as before.

I'm PRing this now because its already a huge diff, and I want to get
this in before I make more meaningful changes such as exposing some of
this to libghostty or adding a simpler Stream handler that maps to
terminal state for the Zig module and so on.

## Benchmarks

There's no meaningful impact on VT processing, I'd say all changes seen
below are noise:

<img width="2038" height="1392" alt="CleanShot 2025-10-25 at 07 10
04@2x"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/af6fa611-5b35-44d0-91ae-26955b1f980a"
/>

## One more `@hasDecl`

There is one more `hasDecl` remaining for `handleManually`. This is a
special case that's only used by our inspector. I think there is a
better way to do this but I didn't want to bloat this PR with anything
more! This doesn't impact our primary consumers of stream.

## AI Disclosure

I used AI considerably in handling the rote tasks in refactoring this. I
did the design myself manually but then prompted AI to help complete it
step by step. I did review each manually and understand it but I want to
take a careful review again...
2025-10-25 13:33:18 -07:00
2025-10-06 08:47:02 -07:00
2025-10-19 00:15:26 +00:00
2025-07-29 12:10:42 -07:00
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2025-09-05 10:10:52 +02:00

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Ghostty

Fast, native, feature-rich terminal emulator pushing modern features.
About · Download · Documentation · Contributing · Developing

About

Ghostty is a terminal emulator that differentiates itself by being fast, feature-rich, and native. While there are many excellent terminal emulators available, they all force you to choose between speed, features, or native UIs. Ghostty provides all three.

In all categories, I am not trying to claim that Ghostty is the best (i.e. the fastest, most feature-rich, or most native). But Ghostty is competitive in all three categories and Ghostty doesn't make you choose between them.

Ghostty also intends to push the boundaries of what is possible with a terminal emulator by exposing modern, opt-in features that enable CLI tool developers to build more feature rich, interactive applications.

While aiming for this ambitious goal, our first step is to make Ghostty one of the best fully standards compliant terminal emulator, remaining compatible with all existing shells and software while supporting all of the latest terminal innovations in the ecosystem. You can use Ghostty as a drop-in replacement for your existing terminal emulator.

For more details, see About Ghostty.

Download

See the download page on the Ghostty website.

Documentation

See the documentation on the Ghostty website.

Contributing and Developing

If you have any ideas, issues, etc. regarding Ghostty, or would like to contribute to Ghostty through pull requests, please check out our "Contributing to Ghostty" document. Those who would like to get involved with Ghostty's development as well should also read the "Developing Ghostty" document for more technical details.

Roadmap and Status

The high-level ambitious plan for the project, in order:

# Step Status
1 Standards-compliant terminal emulation
2 Competitive performance
3 Basic customizability -- fonts, bg colors, etc.
4 Richer windowing features -- multi-window, tabbing, panes
5 Native Platform Experiences (i.e. Mac Preference Panel) ⚠️
6 Cross-platform libghostty for Embeddable Terminals ⚠️
7 Windows Terminals (including PowerShell, Cmd, WSL)
N Fancy features (to be expanded upon later)

Additional details for each step in the big roadmap below:

Standards-Compliant Terminal Emulation

Ghostty implements enough control sequences to be used by hundreds of testers daily for over the past year. Further, we've done a comprehensive xterm audit comparing Ghostty's behavior to xterm and building a set of conformance test cases.

We believe Ghostty is one of the most compliant terminal emulators available.

Terminal behavior is partially a de jure standard (i.e. ECMA-48) but mostly a de facto standard as defined by popular terminal emulators worldwide. Ghostty takes the approach that our behavior is defined by (1) standards, if available, (2) xterm, if the feature exists, (3) other popular terminals, in that order. This defines what the Ghostty project views as a "standard."

Competitive Performance

We need better benchmarks to continuously verify this, but Ghostty is generally in the same performance category as the other highest performing terminal emulators.

For rendering, we have a multi-renderer architecture that uses OpenGL on Linux and Metal on macOS. As far as I'm aware, we're the only terminal emulator other than iTerm that uses Metal directly. And we're the only terminal emulator that has a Metal renderer that supports ligatures (iTerm uses a CPU renderer if ligatures are enabled). We can maintain around 60fps under heavy load and much more generally -- though the terminal is usually rendering much lower due to little screen changes.

For IO, we have a dedicated IO thread that maintains very little jitter under heavy IO load (i.e. cat <big file>.txt). On benchmarks for IO, we're usually within a small margin of other fast terminal emulators. For example, reading a dump of plain text is 4x faster compared to iTerm and Kitty, and 2x faster than Terminal.app. Alacritty is very fast but we're still around the same speed (give or take) and our app experience is much more feature rich.

Note

Despite being very fast, there is a lot of room for improvement here.

Richer Windowing Features

The Mac and Linux (build with GTK) apps support multi-window, tabbing, and splits.

Native Platform Experiences

Ghostty is a cross-platform terminal emulator but we don't aim for a least-common-denominator experience. There is a large, shared core written in Zig but we do a lot of platform-native things:

  • The macOS app is a true SwiftUI-based application with all the things you would expect such as real windowing, menu bars, a settings GUI, etc.
  • macOS uses a true Metal renderer with CoreText for font discovery.
  • The Linux app is built with GTK.

There are more improvements to be made. The macOS settings window is still a work-in-progress. Similar improvements will follow with Linux.

Cross-platform libghostty for Embeddable Terminals

In addition to being a standalone terminal emulator, Ghostty is a C-compatible library for embedding a fast, feature-rich terminal emulator in any 3rd party project. This library is called libghostty.

This goal is not hypothetical! The macOS app is a libghostty consumer. The macOS app is a native Swift app developed in Xcode and main() is within Swift. The Swift app links to libghostty and uses the C API to render terminals.

This step encompasses expanding libghostty support to more platforms and more use cases. At the time of writing this, libghostty is very Mac-centric -- particularly around rendering -- and we have work to do to expand this to other platforms.

Crash Reports

Ghostty has a built-in crash reporter that will generate and save crash reports to disk. The crash reports are saved to the $XDG_STATE_HOME/ghostty/crash directory. If $XDG_STATE_HOME is not set, the default is ~/.local/state. Crash reports are not automatically sent anywhere off your machine.

Crash reports are only generated the next time Ghostty is started after a crash. If Ghostty crashes and you want to generate a crash report, you must restart Ghostty at least once. You should see a message in the log that a crash report was generated.

Note

Use the ghostty +crash-report CLI command to get a list of available crash reports. A future version of Ghostty will make the contents of the crash reports more easily viewable through the CLI and GUI.

Crash reports end in the .ghosttycrash extension. The crash reports are in Sentry envelope format. You can upload these to your own Sentry account to view their contents, but the format is also publicly documented so any other available tools can also be used. The ghostty +crash-report CLI command can be used to list any crash reports. A future version of Ghostty will show you the contents of the crash report directly in the terminal.

To send the crash report to the Ghostty project, you can use the following CLI command using the Sentry CLI:

SENTRY_DSN=https://e914ee84fd895c4fe324afa3e53dac76@o4507352570920960.ingest.us.sentry.io/4507850923638784 sentry-cli send-envelope --raw <path to ghostty crash>

Warning

The crash report can contain sensitive information. The report doesn't purposely contain sensitive information, but it does contain the full stack memory of each thread at the time of the crash. This information is used to rebuild the stack trace but can also contain sensitive data depending on when the crash occurred.

Description
👻 Ghostty is a fast, feature-rich, and cross-platform terminal emulator that uses platform-native UI and GPU acceleration.
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