This PR adds the ability to configure which files are considered
"hidden" in the project panel and toggle their visibility with a
keyboard shortcut. Previously, the editor hardcoded dotfiles as hidden -
now users can customize the pattern and quickly show/hide them.
### Release Notes
- Added `project_panel::ToggleHideHidden` action with keyboard shortcuts
to toggle visibility of hidden files
- Added configurable `hidden_files` setting to customize which files are
marked as hidden (defaults to `**/.*` for dotfiles)
### Motivation
This change allows users to:
1. Quickly toggle hidden file visibility with a keyboard shortcut
2. Customize which files are considered "hidden" beyond just dotfiles
3. Better organize their project panel by hiding build artifacts, logs,
or other generated files
### Usage
**Toggle hidden files:**
- **macOS:** `cmd-alt-.`
- **Linux:** `ctrl-alt-.`
- **Windows:** `ctrl-alt-.`
**Customize patterns in settings:**
```json
{
"hidden_files": ["**/.*", "**/*.tmp", "**/build/**"]
}
```
### Changes
**Core Implementation:**
- Added `hidden_files` setting (defaults to `**/.*` to match current
dotfile behavior)
- Replaced hardcoded `name.starts_with('.')` logic with configurable
pattern matching using `PathMatcher`
- Hidden status propagates through directory hierarchies (if a directory
is hidden, all children inherit that status)
**User-Facing:**
- Added `ToggleHideHidden` action in the project panel
- Added keyboard shortcuts for all platforms
- Added settings UI entry for configuring `hidden_files` patterns
**Testing:**
- Added comprehensive test coverage validating default behavior, custom
patterns, propagation, and settings changes
### Implementation Notes
- Uses `PathMatcher` for efficient glob matching
- Settings changes automatically trigger worktree re-indexing
- No breaking changes - defaults maintain current behavior (hiding
dotfiles)
---
**Disclaimer:** This was implemented with a fair amount of copy/paste
(particularly the gitignore handling), trial and error, and a healthy
dose of Claude.
### Screenshots
**Project Panel with hidden files visible:**
<img width="1368" height="935" alt="Screenshot 2025-10-30 at 3 15 53 AM"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/1cbe90ce-504c-4f9b-bca8-bef02ab961be"
/>
**Project Panel with hidden files hidden:**
<img width="1363" height="917" alt="Screenshot 2025-10-30 at 3 16 07 AM"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/9297f43e-98c7-4b19-be8f-3934589d6451"
/>
**Toggle action in command palette:**
<img width="565" height="161" alt="Screenshot 2025-10-30 at 3 17 26 AM"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/4dc9e7b6-9c29-4972-b886-88d8018905da"
/>
Release Notes:
- Added the ability to configure glob patterns for files treated as
hidden in the project panel using the `hidden_files` setting.
- Added an action `project panel: toggle hidden files` to quickly show
or hide hidden files in the project panel.
---------
Co-authored-by: Smit Barmase <heysmitbarmase@gmail.com>
Closes#39037
Previously, the code split the `**/.env` glob in `file_scan_inclusions`
into two sources for the `PathMatcher`: `["**", "**/.env"]`. This
approach works for directories, but including `**` will match all
directories and their files. To address this, I now select the
appropriate `PathMatcher` using only `**/.env` when specifically
targeting a file to determine whether to include it in the file finder.
Release Notes:
- Fixed: respect `.gitignore` and `file_scan_inclusions` settings with
`**` in glob for file finder
---------
Signed-off-by: Benjamin <5719034+bnjjj@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Julia Ryan <juliaryan3.14@gmail.com>
When doing a project wide search in zed on windows for `hang`, zed
starts to freeze for a couple seconds ultimately starting to error with
`Not enough quota is available to process this command.` when
dispatching windows messages. The cause for this is that we simply
overload the windows message pump due to the sheer amount of foreground
tasks we spawn when we populate the project search.
This PR is an attempt at reducing this.
Release Notes:
- Reduced hangs and stutters in large project file searches
This PR adds a setting to prevent projects from being shared in public
channels.
This can be enabled by adding the following to the project settings
(`.zed/settings.json`):
```json
{
"prevent_sharing_in_public_channels": true
}
```
This will then disable the "Share" button when not in a private channel:
<img width="380" height="115" alt="Screenshot 2025-10-28 at 2 28 10 PM"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/6761ac34-c0d5-4451-a443-adf7a1c42bcd"
/>
Release Notes:
- collaboration: Added a `prevent_sharing_in_public_channels` project
setting for preventing projects from being shared in public channels.
Closes #ISSUE
Adds a `Maybe<T>` type to `settings_content`, that makes the distinction
between `null` and omitted settings values explicit. This unlocks a few
more settings in the settings UI
Release Notes:
- N/A *or* Added/Fixed/Improved ...
- Notable change is the use of a newtype for `ReplicaId`
- Fixes `WorktreeStore::create_remote_worktree` creating a remote
worktree with the local replica id, though this is not currently used
- Fixes observing the `Agent` (that is following the agent) causing
global clocks to allocate 65535 elements
- Shrinks the size of `Global` a bit. In a local or non-collab remote
session it won't ever allocate still.
Release Notes:
- N/A *or* Added/Fixed/Improved ...
We've been considering removing workspace-hack for a couple reasons:
- Lukas ran into a situation where its build script seemed to be causing
spurious rebuilds. This seems more likely to be a cargo bug than an
issue with workspace-hack itself (given that it has an empty build
script), but we don't necessarily want to take the time to hunt that
down right now.
- Marshall mentioned hakari interacts poorly with automated crate
updates (in our case provided by rennovate) because you'd need to have
`cargo hakari generate && cargo hakari manage-deps` after their changes
and we prefer to not have actions that make commits.
Currently removing workspace-hack causes our workspace to grow from
~1700 to ~2000 crates being built (depending on platform), which is
mainly a problem when you're building the whole workspace or running
tests across the the normal and remote binaries (which is where
feature-unification nets us the most sharing). It doesn't impact
incremental times noticeably when you're just iterating on `-p zed`, and
we'll hopefully get these savings back in the future when
rust-lang/cargo#14774 (which re-implements the functionality of hakari)
is finished.
Release Notes:
- N/A
A small follow-up to the settings refactor of a few weeks ago to move
all the VSCode settings imports
to one place.
This should make it easier to spot missing imports, and easier to test
the importer.
Release Notes:
- N/A
Follow-up after #40417, which should've fixed hangs.
smol::fs uses a separate threadpool, which is a bit yuck.
This PR also added a benchmark you can use to run a full worktree scan
(initial one, that is) for arbitrary worktree.. and refactored worktree
scanner to use async locks, as otherwise tests were deadlocking. :)
I've benchmarked it against Zed, Linux and Chromium and saw a ~60% drop
in initial worktree scan times across the board.
Release Notes:
- Significantly (3.3x speedup over the old implementation) improved
speed of Zed's worktree scanner, that's responsible for synchronizing
the state of your project with the state of files on hard drive.
---------
Co-authored-by: Smit Barmase <heysmitbarmase@gmail.com>
smol::fs uses a separate threadpool, which is a bit yuck.
This PR also added a benchmark you can use to run a full worktree scan
(initial one, that is) for arbitrary worktree.. and refactored worktree
scanner to use async locks, as otherwise tests were deadlocking. :)
I've benchmarked it against Zed, Linux and Chromium and saw a ~60% drop
in initial worktree scan times across the board.
Release Notes:
- Significantly (3.3x speedup over the old implementation) improved
speed of Zed's worktree scanner, that's responsible for synchronizing
the state of your project with the state of files on hard drive.
---------
Co-authored-by: Smit Barmase <heysmitbarmase@gmail.com>
Closes#5185
Release Notes:
- Added an option to hide hidden files in the project panel by setting
`hide_hidden` in the project panel settings.
---------
Co-authored-by: Gaauwe Rombouts <gromdroid@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Gaauwe Rombouts <mail@grombouts.nl>
Before this change the active theme and icon theme were retrofitted onto
the ThemeSettings.
Now they're in their own new global (GlobalTheme::theme(cx) and
GlobalTheme::icon_theme(cx))
This lets us remove cx from the settings traits, and tidy up a few other
things along the way.
Release Notes:
- N/A
When running flycheck, I've noticed that scrolling starts to lag:
https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/b0bef0a3-ccbd-479d-a385-273398086d38
When checking the trace, it is notable that project panel updates its
entire tree multiple times during flycheck:
<img width="2032" height="1136" alt="image"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/d1935e77-3b00-4be5-a12a-8a17a9d64202"
/>
[scrolling.trace.zip](https://github.com/user-attachments/files/22710852/scrolling.trace.zip)
Turns out, `target/debug` directory is loaded by Zed (presumably,
reported by langserver as there are sources generated by bindgen and
proto that need to be loaded), and `target/debug/build` directory
received multiple events of a `None` kind for Zed, which trigger the
rescans.
Rework the logic to omit the `None`-kind events in Zed, and to avoid
excessive repo updates if not needed.
Release Notes:
- Improved worktree FS event emits in gitignored directories
---------
Co-authored-by: Cole Miller <cole@zed.dev>
We've seen this panic come up in the last two weeks, which might be
caused by #33592. However, we are not sure what paths can cause this
`unwrap()` to fail. Therefore adding some logging around this, so that
the next time someone opens a bug report we can further diagnose the
issue.
Fixes ZED-1F6
Release Notes:
- Fixed an issue where Zed could crash when including specific paths in
a global `.gitignore` files
Closes #ISSUE
Adds a couple functions to the `SettingsStore`:
- `get_value_from_file`: Gets a value from a given settings file
(`Local`, `User`, etc) and if the value isn't found in the requested
file, walks the known settings files in the order in which they are
merged to find the settings value in lower precedence settings files
(i.e. if value not set anywhere will always return default value)
- `get_overrides_for_field`: Returns a list of settings files where a
given setting is set that have higher precedence than the passed in
file. e.g. passing in user will result in project settings files where
the value is set being returned.
Additionally changes the default for the `project_name` setting to
uphold the rules we are attempting to enforce on the settings, namely:
- All settings fields should be of the form `Option<T>`
- `None` (or `null` in JSON) should never be a meaningful value
Follow up PRs will handle implementing a function to write to an
arbitrary settings file, and passing through metadata to the above
functions to control how overrides are determined for more complicated
cases like `SaturatingBool` (`disable_ai`) and `ExtendingVec`
Release Notes:
- N/A *or* Added/Fixed/Improved ...
---------
Co-authored-by: Ben Kunkle <ben@zed.dev>
Co-authored-by: Anthony Eid <hello@anthonyeid.me>
Co-authored-by: Danilo Leal <daniloleal09@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Anthony <anthony@zed.dev>
Also skips indexing files that don't have a suffix that indicates a
known language, and skips when the language doesn't have an outline
grammar.
Release Notes:
- N/A
---------
Co-authored-by: Agus <agus@zed.dev>
Closes https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/issues/38690Closes#37353
### Background
On Windows, paths are normally separated by `\`, unlike mac and linux
where they are separated by `/`. When editing code in a project that
uses a different path style than your local system (e.g. remoting from
Windows to Linux, using WSL, and collaboration between windows and unix
users), the correct separator for a path may differ from the "native"
separator.
Previously, to work around this, Zed converted paths' separators in
numerous places. This was applied to both absolute and relative paths,
leading to incorrect conversions in some cases.
### Solution
Many code paths in Zed use paths that are *relative* to either a
worktree root or a git repository. This PR introduces a dedicated type
for these paths called `RelPath`, which stores the path in the same way
regardless of host platform, and offers `Path`-like manipulation APIs.
RelPath supports *displaying* the path using either separator, so that
we can display paths in a style that is determined at runtime based on
the current project.
The representation of absolute paths is left untouched, for now.
Absolute paths are different from relative paths because (except in
contexts where we know that the path refers to the local filesystem)
they should generally be treated as opaque strings. Currently we use a
mix of types for these paths (std::path::Path, String, SanitizedPath).
Release Notes:
- N/A
---------
Co-authored-by: Cole Miller <cole@zed.dev>
Co-authored-by: Piotr Osiewicz <24362066+osiewicz@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Peter Tripp <petertripp@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Smit Barmase <heysmitbarmase@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Lukas Wirth <me@lukaswirth.dev>
When we refactored settings to not pass JSON blobs around, we ended up
needing
to write *a lot* of code that just merged things (like json merge used
to do).
Use a derive macro to prevent typos in this logic.
Release Notes:
- N/A
Co-Authored-By: Ben K <ben@zed.dev>
Co-Authored-By: Anthony <anthony@zed.dev>
Co-Authored-By: Mikayla <mikayla@zed.dev>
Release Notes:
- settings: Major internal changes to settings. The primary user-facing
effect is that some settings which did not make sense in project
settings files are no-longer read from there. (For example the inline
blame settings)
---------
Co-authored-by: Ben Kunkle <ben@zed.dev>
Co-authored-by: Mikayla Maki <mikayla.c.maki@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Anthony <anthony@zed.dev>
This PR separates out the associated constant `KEY` from the `Settings`
trait into a new trait `SettingsKey`. This allows for the key trait to
be derived using attributes to specify the path so that the new
`SettingsUi` derive macro can use the same attributes to determine top
level settings paths thereby removing the need to duplicate the path in
both `Settings::KEY` and `#[settings_ui(path = "...")]`
Co-authored-by: Ben Kunkle <ben@zed.dev>
Release Notes:
- N/A
---------
Co-authored-by: Ben Kunkle <ben@zed.dev>
Extracts and cleans up GPUI's scheduler code into a new `scheduler`
crate, making it pluggable by external runtimes. This will enable
deterministic integration testing with cloud components by providing a
unified test scheduler across Zed and backend code. In Zed, it will
replace the existing GPUI scheduler for consistent async task management
across platforms.
## Changes
- **Core Implementation**: `TestScheduler` with seed-based
randomization, session tracking (`SessionId`), and foreground/background
task separation for reproducible testing.
- **Executors**: `ForegroundExecutor` (!Send, thread-local) and
`BackgroundExecutor` (Send, with blocking/timeout support) as
GPUI-compatible wrappers.
- **Clock and Timer**: Controllable `TestClock` and future-based `Timer`
for time-sensitive tests.
- **Testing APIs**: `once()`, `with_seed()`, and `many()` methods for
configurable test runs.
- **Dependencies**: Added `async-task`, `chrono`, `futures`, etc., with
updates to `Cargo.toml` and lock file.
## Benefits
- **Integration Testing**: Facilitates reliable async tests involving
cloud sessions, reducing flakiness via deterministic execution.
- **Pluggability**: Trait-based design (`Scheduler`) allows easy
integration into non-GPUI runtimes while maintaining GPUI compatibility.
- **Cleanup**: Refactors GPUI scheduler logic for clarity, correctness
(no `unwrap()`, proper error handling), and extensibility.
Follows Rust guidelines; run `./script/clippy` for verification.
- [x] Define and test a core scheduler that we think can power our cloud
code and GPUI
- [ ] Replace GPUI's scheduler
Release Notes:
- N/A
---------
Co-authored-by: Antonio Scandurra <me@as-cii.com>
Closes #ISSUE
Initially, the `SettingsUi` trait was tied to `Settings`, however, given
that the `Settings::FileContent` type (which may be the same as the type
that implements `Settings`) will be the type that more directly maps to
the JSON structure (and therefore have the documentation, correct field
names (or `serde` rename attributes), etc) it makes more sense to have
the deriving of `SettingsUi` occur on the `FileContent` type rather than
the `Settings` type.
In order for this to work a relatively important change had to be made
to the derive macro, that being that it now "unwraps" options into their
inner type, so a field with type `Option<Foo>` where `Foo: SettingsUi`
will treat the field as if it were just `Foo`, expecting there to be a
default set in `default.json`. This imposes some restrictions on what
`Settings::FileContent` can be as seen in 1e19398 where `FileContent`
itself can't be optional without manually implementing `SettingsUi`, as
well as introducing some risk that if the `FileContent` type has
`serde(default)`, the default value will override the default value from
`default.json` in the UI even though it may differ (but it should!).
A future PR should probably replace the other settings with `FileContent
= Option<T>` (all of which currently have `T == bool`) with wrapper
structs and have `KEY = None` so the further niceties
`derive(SettingsUi)` will provide such as path renaming, custom UI, auto
naming and doc comment extraction can be used.
Release Notes:
- N/A *or* Added/Fixed/Improved ...
## Goal
This PR creates the initial settings ui structure with the primary goal
of making a settings UI that is
- Comprehensive: All settings are available through the UI
- Correct: Easy to understand the underlying JSON file from the UI
- Intuitive
- Easy to implement per setting so that UI is not a hindrance to future
settings changes
### Structure
The overall structure is settings layer -> data layer -> ui layer.
The settings layer is the pre-existing settings definitions, that
implement the `Settings` trait. The data layer is constructed from
settings primarily through the `SettingsUi` trait, and it's associated
derive macro. The data layer tracks the grouping of the settings, the
json path of the settings, and a data representation of how to render
the controls for the setting in the UI, that is either a marker value
for the component to use (avoiding a dependency on the `ui` crate) or a
custom render function.
Abstracting the data layer from the ui layer allows crates depending on
`settings` to implement their own UI without having to add additional UI
dependencies, thus avoiding circular dependencies. In cases where custom
UI is desired, and a creating a custom render function in the same crate
is infeasible due to circular dependencies, the current solution is to
implement a marker for the component in the `settings` crate, and then
handle the rendering of that component in `settings_ui`.
### Foundation
This PR creates a macro and a trait both called `SettingsUi`. The
`SettingsUi` trait is added as a new trait bound on the `Settings`
trait, this allows the type system to guarantee that all settings
implement UI functionality. The macro is used to derived the trait for
most types, and can be modified through attributes for unique cases as
well.
A derive-macro is used to generate the settings UI trait impl, allowing
it the UI generation to be generated from the static information in our
code base (`default.json`, Struct/Enum names, field names, `serde`
attributes, etc). This allows the UI to be auto-generated for the most
part, and ensures consistency across the UI.
#### Immediate Follow ups
- Add a new `SettingsPath` trait that will be a trait bound on
`SettingsUi` and `Settings`
- This trait will replace the `Settings::key` value to enable
`SettingsUi` to infer the json path of it's derived type
- Figure out how to render `Option<T> where T: SettingsUi` correctly
- Handle `serde` attributes in the `SettingsUi` proc macro to correctly
get json path from a type's field and identity
Release Notes:
- N/A
---------
Co-authored-by: Ben Kunkle <ben@zed.dev>
The scanner is restarted after loading initial settings, and there was
an optimization to not re-discover and re-watch git repositories if they
already exist in the snapshot. #35865 added cleanup of watches that
occurred when the scanner restarts, and so in some cases repos were no
longer watched.
Release Notes:
- Linux: Fixed a case where Git repositories might not be watched for
changes, causing branch switching to not update the UI.
Co-authored-by: Julia <julia@zed.dev>
This removes around 900 unnecessary clones, ranging from cloning a few
ints all the way to large data structures and images.
A lot of these were fixed using `cargo clippy --fix --workspace
--all-targets`, however it often breaks other lints and needs to be run
again. This was then followed up with some manual fixing.
I understand this is a large diff, but all the changes are pretty
trivial. Rust is doing some heavy lifting here for us. Once I get it up
to speed with main, I'd appreciate this getting merged rather sooner
than later.
Release Notes:
- N/A