This commit adds a new feature which allows the user to specify a set of
rules for a specific workspace that will be used to calculate which
layout to apply to that workspace at any given time.
The rule consists of a usize, which identifies the threshold of window
containers which need to be visible on the workspace to activate the
rule, and a layout, which will be applied to the workspace when the rule
is activated.
Both default and custom layouts can be used in workspace layout rules.
When a workspace has layout rules in effect, manually changing the
layout will not work again until the rules for that workspace have been
cleared.
This feature came about after trying but failing to modify the custom
layout code in such a way that the width percentage of a primary column
in a custom layout might be propagated to the fallback columnar layout
when the tertiary column threshold is not met.
Although this new feature introduces more complexity, it is strictly
opt-in and can be completely ignored if the user has no interest in
adjusting layouts based on the visible window count.
re #121
A user on the Discord noted that PyCharm windows were not being managed
as expected when initially launched. After some digging this seems to be
the same issue that was addressed for IntelliJ and Firefox early on in
development, where these applications send EVENT_OBJECT_NAMECHANGE on
launch instead of the regular event when drawing a new window.
The OBJECT_NAME_CHANGE_ON_LAUNCH vec was not previously exposed via
komorebic to allow users to identify other applications that exhibit the
same behaviour. This commit adds a command to allow users to specify
further applications in their configuration files.
This commit introduces the 'notification-schema' command to generate a
JSON schema of the Notification struct which gets sent when notifying
subscribers of updates.
This commit introduces a change to allow users to set a custom
configuration directory for Komorebi to address concerns about $HOME
getting cluttered.
The custom directory can be set with the environment variable
$Env:KOMOREBI_CONFIG_HOME (this should probably be done in $PROFILE).
If this variable is not set, komorebi will default to using
the $HOME directory.
resolve#61
This commit addresses issues that users have been faced with when
installing komorebi with scoop, which resulted in komorebi exiting
almost immediately without providing any feedback as to what had
happened.
Scoop launches komorebi using an exe shim of the same name, which
results in two komorebi.exe named processes running at the same time.
This situation then fails the startup check which attempts to ensure
that only one instance of komorebi.exe ever runs at any given time.
The process startup check has been updated to allow for two komorebi.exe
named processes to be running if one of them is recognised as a Scoop
shim process.
fix#95
This update ensures that whenever a new float rule is added, the focused
workspaces on all monitors will be checked to see if there are any
currently managed windows which match that rule. If so, the matching
window(s) will be removed from the workspace and the workspace will be
updated.
Matching windows on non-focused workspaces will not be removed, as these
windows may be hidden, and removing them could result in these windows
being inaccessible, requiring them to be killed before they can be
relaunched
fix#93
This commit adds a new komorebic command to move the entire focused
workspace and all managed windows and containers to a target monitor
index. Windows that have been excluded from management using various
rules will not be moved as they are not tracked in the window manager
state.
resolve#88
This commit ensures that errors are sent to komorebic in response to the
state command if they occur, so that komorebic is not left hanging
indefinitely waiting for a successful response that will never come.
This commit fixes a regression introduced in
85fe20ebba, where running komorebi before
creating and interacting with virtual desktops via the task view on
Windows 10 would cause komorebi to panic when it could not find the
CurrentVirtualDesktop key in the registry, as it only gets populated
after interacting with virtual desktops via the task view in a new
session.
This commit adds a new command which allows the focusing of workspaces
on monitors other than the currently focused monitor by specifying a
monitor index.
Sending this command to komorebi will make the target monitor index the
currently focused monitor.
resolve#85
This commit refactors the validations that ensure that only commands and
events originating on the same virtual desktop that komorebi was started
on are managed.
This was previously handled by the winvd crate which relied on
undocumented APIs that broke as of Windows 11. This method, while not
very elegant, seems like the best solution for now.
In short, komorebi checks the registry (which has different paths on
Win10 and Win11...) to keep track of the current virtual desktop id.
This is problematic because we just end up comparing byte arrays, and
there is no meaningful representation of the ids that are being
compared, not even a GUID. Nevertheless, it works and it ensures that
komorebi is limited to operating on a single virtual desktop.
resolve#77