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Author SHA1 Message Date
ecaa42fa77 Remove unused useShallow import to fix tsc build
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Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-03-12 13:20:08 -07:00
280358166a Show copy hint in status bar when terminal text is selected
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When the user highlights text in the terminal, a "Ctrl+Shift+C to copy"
hint appears in the status bar next to the project/terminal counts.
The hint disappears when the selection is cleared.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-03-12 13:14:08 -07:00
4732feb33e Add Ctrl+Shift+C keyboard shortcut for copying terminal text
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Ctrl+C in the terminal sends SIGINT which cancels running Claude work.
This adds a custom key handler so Ctrl+Shift+C copies selected text to
the clipboard without interrupting the container.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-03-12 13:05:10 -07:00
5977024953 Update Ollama docs and UI to mark model as required
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The model field must be set and the model must be pre-pulled in Ollama
before the container will work. Updated README, HOW-TO-USE, and the
ProjectCard UI label/tooltip to reflect this.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-03-12 12:53:24 -07:00
27007b90e3 Fetch help content from repo, add TOC and marketplace troubleshooting
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Help dialog now fetches HOW-TO-USE.md live from the gitea repo on open,
falling back to the compile-time embedded copy when offline. Content is
cached for the session. Removes the ~600-line hardcoded markdown constant
from HelpDialog.tsx in favor of a single source of truth.

Adds a Table of Contents with anchor links for quick navigation and a new
troubleshooting entry for the "Failed to install Anthropic marketplace"
error with the jq fix. Markdown renderer updated to support anchor links
and header id attributes.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-03-12 11:00:59 -07:00
38e65619e9 Fix tooltips clipped by overflow containers, improve Backend tooltip text
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Rewrite Tooltip to use React portal (createPortal to document.body) so
tooltips render above all UI elements regardless of ancestor overflow:hidden.
Also increased max-width from 220px to 280px for longer descriptions.

Expanded Backend tooltip to explain each option (Anthropic, Bedrock,
Ollama, LiteLLM) with practical context for new users.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-03-12 09:56:50 -07:00
d2c1c2108a Fix update checker to use full semver comparison and correct platform filtering
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The version comparison was only comparing the patch number, ignoring major
and minor versions. This meant 0.1.75 (patch=75) appeared "newer" than
0.2.1 (patch=1), and updates within 0.2.x were missed entirely.

Also fixed platform filtering to handle -mac suffix (previously only
filtered -win, so Linux users would see macOS releases too).

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-03-12 09:45:43 -07:00
13 changed files with 279 additions and 699 deletions

View File

@@ -4,6 +4,25 @@ Triple-C (Claude-Code-Container) is a desktop application that runs Claude Code
---
## Table of Contents
- [Prerequisites](#prerequisites)
- [First Launch](#first-launch)
- [The Interface](#the-interface)
- [Project Management](#project-management)
- [Project Configuration](#project-configuration)
- [MCP Servers (Beta)](#mcp-servers-beta)
- [AWS Bedrock Configuration](#aws-bedrock-configuration)
- [Ollama Configuration](#ollama-configuration)
- [LiteLLM Configuration](#litellm-configuration)
- [Settings](#settings)
- [Terminal Features](#terminal-features)
- [Scheduled Tasks (Inside the Container)](#scheduled-tasks-inside-the-container)
- [What's Inside the Container](#whats-inside-the-container)
- [Troubleshooting](#troubleshooting)
---
## Prerequisites
### Docker
@@ -94,8 +113,9 @@ Claude Code launches automatically with `--dangerously-skip-permissions` inside
1. Stop the container first (settings can only be changed while stopped).
2. In the project card, switch the backend to **Ollama**.
3. Expand the **Config** panel and set the base URL of your Ollama server (defaults to `http://host.docker.internal:11434` for a local instance). Optionally set a model ID.
4. Start the container again.
3. Expand the **Config** panel and set the base URL of your Ollama server (defaults to `http://host.docker.internal:11434` for a local instance). Set the **Model ID** to the model you want to use (required).
4. Make sure the model has been pulled in Ollama (e.g., `ollama pull qwen3.5:27b`) or used via Ollama cloud before starting.
5. Start the container again.
**LiteLLM:**
@@ -395,7 +415,7 @@ To use Claude Code with a local or remote Ollama server, switch the backend to *
### Settings
- **Base URL** — The URL of your Ollama server. Defaults to `http://host.docker.internal:11434`, which reaches a locally running Ollama instance from inside the container. For a remote server, use its IP or hostname (e.g., `http://192.168.1.100:11434`).
- **Model ID** — Optional. Override the model to use (e.g., `qwen3.5:27b`).
- **Model ID** — **Required.** The model to use (e.g., `qwen3.5:27b`). The model must be pulled in Ollama before use — run `ollama pull <model>` or use it via Ollama cloud so it is available when the container starts.
### How It Works
@@ -403,6 +423,8 @@ Triple-C sets `ANTHROPIC_BASE_URL` to point Claude Code at your Ollama server in
> **Note:** Ollama support is best-effort. Claude Code is designed for Anthropic models, so some features (tool use, extended thinking, prompt caching, etc.) may not work as expected with non-Anthropic models.
> **Important:** The model must already be available in Ollama before starting the container. If using a local Ollama instance, pull the model first with `ollama pull <model-name>`. If using Ollama's cloud service, ensure the model has been used at least once so it is cached.
---
## LiteLLM Configuration
@@ -622,3 +644,13 @@ You can install additional tools at runtime with `sudo apt install`, `pip instal
- Ensure the Docker image for the MCP server exists (pull it first if needed).
- Check that Docker socket access is available (stdio + Docker MCP servers auto-enable this).
- Try resetting the project container to force a clean recreation.
### "Failed to install Anthropic marketplace" Error
If Claude Code shows **"Failed to install Anthropic marketplace - Will retry on next startup"** repeatedly, the marketplace metadata in `~/.claude.json` may be corrupted. To fix this, open a **Shell** session in the project and run:
```bash
cp ~/.claude.json ~/.claude.json.bak && jq 'with_entries(select(.key | startswith("officialMarketplace") | not))' ~/.claude.json.bak > ~/.claude.json
```
This backs up your config and removes the corrupted marketplace entries. Claude Code will re-download them cleanly on the next startup.

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@@ -49,7 +49,7 @@ Each project can independently use one of:
- **Anthropic** (OAuth): User runs `claude login` inside the terminal on first use. Token persisted in the config volume across restarts and resets.
- **AWS Bedrock**: Per-project AWS credentials (static keys, profile, or bearer token). SSO sessions are validated before launching Claude for Profile auth.
- **Ollama**: Connect to a local or remote Ollama server via `ANTHROPIC_BASE_URL` (e.g., `http://host.docker.internal:11434`). Optional model override.
- **Ollama**: Connect to a local or remote Ollama server via `ANTHROPIC_BASE_URL` (e.g., `http://host.docker.internal:11434`). Requires a model ID, and the model must be pulled (or used via Ollama cloud) before starting the container.
- **LiteLLM**: Connect through a LiteLLM proxy gateway via `ANTHROPIC_BASE_URL` + `ANTHROPIC_AUTH_TOKEN` to access 100+ model providers. API key stored securely in OS keychain.
> **Note:** Ollama and LiteLLM support is best-effort. Claude Code is designed for Anthropic models, so some features (tool use, extended thinking, prompt caching, etc.) may not work as expected with non-Anthropic models behind these backends.

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@@ -0,0 +1,60 @@
use std::sync::OnceLock;
use tokio::sync::Mutex;
const HELP_URL: &str =
"https://repo.anhonesthost.net/cybercovellc/triple-c/raw/branch/main/HOW-TO-USE.md";
const EMBEDDED_HELP: &str = include_str!("../../../../HOW-TO-USE.md");
/// Cached help content fetched from the remote repo (or `None` if not yet fetched).
static CACHED_HELP: OnceLock<Mutex<Option<String>>> = OnceLock::new();
/// Return the help markdown content.
///
/// On the first call, tries to fetch the latest version from the gitea repo.
/// If that fails (network error, timeout, etc.), falls back to the version
/// embedded at compile time. The result is cached for the rest of the session.
#[tauri::command]
pub async fn get_help_content() -> Result<String, String> {
let mutex = CACHED_HELP.get_or_init(|| Mutex::new(None));
let mut guard = mutex.lock().await;
if let Some(ref cached) = *guard {
return Ok(cached.clone());
}
let content = match fetch_remote_help().await {
Ok(md) => {
log::info!("Loaded help content from remote repo");
md
}
Err(e) => {
log::info!("Using embedded help content (remote fetch failed: {})", e);
EMBEDDED_HELP.to_string()
}
};
*guard = Some(content.clone());
Ok(content)
}
async fn fetch_remote_help() -> Result<String, String> {
let client = reqwest::Client::builder()
.timeout(std::time::Duration::from_secs(10))
.build()
.map_err(|e| format!("Failed to create HTTP client: {}", e))?;
let resp = client
.get(HELP_URL)
.send()
.await
.map_err(|e| format!("Failed to fetch help content: {}", e))?;
if !resp.status().is_success() {
return Err(format!("Remote returned status {}", resp.status()));
}
resp.text()
.await
.map_err(|e| format!("Failed to read response body: {}", e))
}

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@@ -1,6 +1,7 @@
pub mod aws_commands;
pub mod docker_commands;
pub mod file_commands;
pub mod help_commands;
pub mod mcp_commands;
pub mod project_commands;
pub mod settings_commands;

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@@ -34,30 +34,37 @@ pub async fn check_for_updates() -> Result<Option<UpdateInfo>, String> {
.map_err(|e| format!("Failed to parse releases: {}", e))?;
let current_version = env!("CARGO_PKG_VERSION");
let is_windows = cfg!(target_os = "windows");
let current_semver = parse_semver(current_version).unwrap_or((0, 0, 0));
// Determine platform suffix for tag filtering
let platform_suffix: &str = if cfg!(target_os = "windows") {
"-win"
} else if cfg!(target_os = "macos") {
"-mac"
} else {
"" // Linux uses bare tags (no suffix)
};
// Filter releases by platform tag suffix
let platform_releases: Vec<&GiteaRelease> = releases
.iter()
.filter(|r| {
if is_windows {
r.tag_name.ends_with("-win")
if platform_suffix.is_empty() {
// Linux: bare tag only (no -win, no -mac)
!r.tag_name.ends_with("-win") && !r.tag_name.ends_with("-mac")
} else {
!r.tag_name.ends_with("-win")
r.tag_name.ends_with(platform_suffix)
}
})
.collect();
// Find the latest release with a higher patch version
// Version format: 0.1.X or v0.1.X (tag may have prefix/suffix)
let current_patch = parse_patch_version(current_version).unwrap_or(0);
let mut best: Option<(&GiteaRelease, u32)> = None;
// Find the latest release with a higher semver version
let mut best: Option<(&GiteaRelease, (u32, u32, u32))> = None;
for release in &platform_releases {
if let Some(patch) = parse_patch_from_tag(&release.tag_name) {
if patch > current_patch {
if best.is_none() || patch > best.unwrap().1 {
best = Some((release, patch));
if let Some(ver) = parse_semver_from_tag(&release.tag_name) {
if ver > current_semver {
if best.is_none() || ver > best.unwrap().1 {
best = Some((release, ver));
}
}
}
@@ -92,36 +99,34 @@ pub async fn check_for_updates() -> Result<Option<UpdateInfo>, String> {
}
}
/// Parse patch version from a semver string like "0.1.5" -> 5
fn parse_patch_version(version: &str) -> Option<u32> {
/// Parse a semver string like "0.2.5" -> (0, 2, 5)
fn parse_semver(version: &str) -> Option<(u32, u32, u32)> {
let clean = version.trim_start_matches('v');
let parts: Vec<&str> = clean.split('.').collect();
if parts.len() >= 3 {
parts[2].parse().ok()
let major = parts[0].parse().ok()?;
let minor = parts[1].parse().ok()?;
let patch = parts[2].parse().ok()?;
Some((major, minor, patch))
} else {
None
}
}
/// Parse patch version from a tag like "v0.1.5", "v0.1.5-win", "0.1.5" -> 5
fn parse_patch_from_tag(tag: &str) -> Option<u32> {
/// Parse semver from a tag like "v0.2.5", "v0.2.5-win", "v0.2.5-mac" -> (0, 2, 5)
fn parse_semver_from_tag(tag: &str) -> Option<(u32, u32, u32)> {
let clean = tag.trim_start_matches('v');
// Remove platform suffix
let clean = clean.strip_suffix("-win").unwrap_or(clean);
parse_patch_version(clean)
let clean = clean.strip_suffix("-win")
.or_else(|| clean.strip_suffix("-mac"))
.unwrap_or(clean);
parse_semver(clean)
}
/// Extract a clean version string from a tag like "v0.1.5-win" -> "0.1.5"
/// Extract a clean version string from a tag like "v0.2.5-win" -> "0.2.5"
fn extract_version_from_tag(tag: &str) -> Option<String> {
let clean = tag.trim_start_matches('v');
let clean = clean.strip_suffix("-win").unwrap_or(clean);
// Validate it looks like a version
let parts: Vec<&str> = clean.split('.').collect();
if parts.len() >= 3 && parts.iter().all(|p| p.parse::<u32>().is_ok()) {
Some(clean.to_string())
} else {
None
}
let (major, minor, patch) = parse_semver_from_tag(tag)?;
Some(format!("{}.{}.{}", major, minor, patch))
}
/// Check whether a newer container image is available in the registry.

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@@ -120,6 +120,8 @@ pub fn run() {
commands::update_commands::get_app_version,
commands::update_commands::check_for_updates,
commands::update_commands::check_image_update,
// Help
commands::help_commands::get_help_content,
])
.run(tauri::generate_context!())
.expect("error while running tauri application");

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@@ -1,619 +1,20 @@
import { useEffect, useRef, useCallback } from "react";
import { useEffect, useRef, useCallback, useState } from "react";
import { getHelpContent } from "../../lib/tauri-commands";
interface Props {
onClose: () => void;
}
const HELP_MARKDOWN = `# How to Use Triple-C
Triple-C (Claude-Code-Container) is a desktop application that runs Claude Code inside isolated Docker containers. Each project gets its own sandboxed environment with bind-mounted directories, so Claude only has access to the files you explicitly provide.
---
## Prerequisites
### Docker
Triple-C requires a running Docker daemon. Install one of the following:
| Platform | Option | Link |
|----------|--------|------|
| **Windows** | Docker Desktop | https://docs.docker.com/desktop/install/windows-install/ |
| **macOS** | Docker Desktop | https://docs.docker.com/desktop/install/mac-install/ |
| **Linux** | Docker Engine | https://docs.docker.com/engine/install/ |
| **Linux** | Docker Desktop (alternative) | https://docs.docker.com/desktop/install/linux/ |
After installation, verify Docker is running:
\`\`\`bash
docker info
\`\`\`
> **Windows note:** Docker Desktop must be running before launching Triple-C. The app communicates with Docker through the named pipe at \`//./pipe/docker_engine\`.
> **Linux note:** Your user must have permission to access the Docker socket (\`/var/run/docker.sock\`). Either add your user to the \`docker\` group (\`sudo usermod -aG docker $USER\`, then log out and back in) or run Docker in rootless mode.
### Claude Code Account
You need access to Claude Code through one of:
- **Anthropic account** — Sign up at https://claude.ai and use \`claude login\` (OAuth) inside the terminal
- **AWS Bedrock** — An AWS account with Bedrock access and Claude models enabled
- **Ollama** — A local or remote Ollama server running an Anthropic-compatible model (best-effort support)
- **LiteLLM** — A LiteLLM proxy gateway providing access to 100+ model providers (best-effort support)
---
## First Launch
### 1. Get the Container Image
When you first open Triple-C, go to the **Settings** tab in the sidebar. Under **Docker**, you'll see:
- **Docker Status** — Should show "Connected" (green). If it shows "Not Available", make sure Docker is running.
- **Image Status** — Will show "Not Found" on first launch.
Choose an **Image Source**:
| Source | Description | When to Use |
|--------|-------------|-------------|
| **Registry** | Pulls the pre-built image from \`repo.anhonesthost.net\` | Fastest setup — recommended for most users |
| **Local Build** | Builds the image locally from the embedded Dockerfile | If you can't reach the registry, or want a custom build |
| **Custom** | Use any Docker image you specify | Advanced — bring your own sandbox image |
Click **Pull Image** (for Registry/Custom) or **Build Image** (for Local Build). A progress log will stream below the button. When complete, the status changes to "Ready" (green).
### 2. Create Your First Project
Switch to the **Projects** tab in the sidebar and click the **+** button.
1. **Project Name** — Give it a meaningful name (e.g., "my-web-app").
2. **Folders** — Click **Browse** to select a directory on your host machine. This directory will be mounted into the container at \`/workspace/<folder-name>\`. You can add multiple folders with the **+** button at the bottom of the folder list.
3. Click **Add Project**.
### 3. Start the Container
Select your project in the sidebar and click **Start**. A progress modal appears showing real-time status as the container starts. The status dot changes from gray (stopped) to orange (starting) to green (running). The modal auto-closes on success.
### 4. Open a Terminal
Click the **Terminal** button to open an interactive terminal session. A new tab appears in the top bar and an xterm.js terminal loads in the main area.
Claude Code launches automatically with \`--dangerously-skip-permissions\` inside the sandboxed container.
### 5. Authenticate
**Anthropic (OAuth) — default:**
1. Type \`claude login\` or \`/login\` in the terminal.
2. Claude prints an OAuth URL. Triple-C detects long URLs and shows a clickable toast at the top of the terminal — click **Open** to open it in your browser.
3. Complete the login in your browser. The token is saved and persists across container stops and resets.
**AWS Bedrock:**
1. Stop the container first (settings can only be changed while stopped).
2. In the project card, switch the backend to **Bedrock**.
3. Expand the **Config** panel and fill in your AWS credentials (see AWS Bedrock Configuration below).
4. Start the container again.
**Ollama:**
1. Stop the container first (settings can only be changed while stopped).
2. In the project card, switch the backend to **Ollama**.
3. Expand the **Config** panel and set the base URL of your Ollama server (defaults to \`http://host.docker.internal:11434\` for a local instance). Optionally set a model ID.
4. Start the container again.
**LiteLLM:**
1. Stop the container first (settings can only be changed while stopped).
2. In the project card, switch the backend to **LiteLLM**.
3. Expand the **Config** panel and set the base URL of your LiteLLM proxy (defaults to \`http://host.docker.internal:4000\`). Optionally set an API key and model ID.
4. Start the container again.
---
## The Interface
\`\`\`
┌─────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
│ TopBar [ Terminal Tabs ] Docker ● Image ●│
├────────────┬────────────────────────────────────────┤
│ Sidebar │ │
│ │ Terminal View │
│ Projects │ (xterm.js) │
│ MCP │ │
│ Settings │ │
├────────────┴────────────────────────────────────────┤
│ StatusBar X projects · X running · X terminals │
└─────────────────────────────────────────────────────┘
\`\`\`
- **TopBar** — Terminal tabs for switching between sessions. Bash shell tabs show a "(bash)" suffix. Status dots on the right show Docker connection (green = connected) and image availability (green = ready).
- **Sidebar** — Toggle between the **Projects** list, **MCP** server configuration, and **Settings** panel.
- **Terminal View** — Interactive terminal powered by xterm.js with WebGL rendering. Includes a **Jump to Current** button that appears when you scroll up, so you can quickly return to the latest output.
- **StatusBar** — Counts of total projects, running containers, and open terminal sessions.
---
## Project Management
### Project Status
Each project shows a colored status dot:
| Color | Status | Meaning |
|-------|--------|---------|
| Gray | Stopped | Container is not running |
| Orange | Starting / Stopping | Container is transitioning |
| Green | Running | Container is active, ready for terminals |
| Red | Error | Something went wrong (check error message) |
### Project Actions
Select a project in the sidebar to see its action buttons:
| Button | When Available | What It Does |
|--------|---------------|--------------|
| **Start** | Stopped | Creates (if needed) and starts the container |
| **Stop** | Running | Stops the container but preserves its state |
| **Terminal** | Running | Opens a new Claude Code terminal session |
| **Shell** | Running | Opens a bash login shell in the container (no Claude Code) |
| **Files** | Running | Opens the file manager to browse, download, and upload files |
| **Reset** | Stopped | Destroys and recreates the container from scratch |
| **Config** | Always | Toggles the configuration panel |
| **Remove** | Stopped | Deletes the project and its container (with confirmation) |
### Renaming a Project
Double-click the project name in the sidebar to rename it inline. Press **Enter** to confirm or **Escape** to cancel.
### Container Lifecycle
Containers use a **stop/start** model. When you stop a container, everything inside it is preserved — installed packages, modified files, downloaded tools. Starting it again resumes where you left off.
**Reset** removes the container and creates a fresh one. However, your Claude Code configuration (including OAuth tokens from \`claude login\`) is stored in a separate Docker volume and survives resets.
Only **Remove** deletes everything, including the config volume and any stored credentials.
### Container Progress Feedback
When starting, stopping, or resetting a container, a progress modal shows real-time status messages (e.g., "Setting up MCP network...", "Starting MCP containers...", "Creating container..."). If an error occurs, the modal displays the error with a **Close** button. A **Force Stop** option is available if the operation stalls. The modal auto-closes on success.
---
## Project Configuration
Click **Config** on a selected project to expand the configuration panel. Settings can only be changed when the container is **stopped** (an orange warning box appears if the container is running).
### Mounted Folders
Each project mounts one or more host directories into the container. The mount appears at \`/workspace/<mount-name>\` inside the container.
- Click **Browse** ("...") to change the host path
- Edit the mount name to control where it appears inside \`/workspace/\`
- Click **+** to add more folders, or **x** to remove one
- Mount names must be unique and use only letters, numbers, dashes, underscores, and dots
### SSH Keys
Specify the path to your SSH key directory (typically \`~/.ssh\`). Keys are mounted read-only and copied into the container with correct permissions. This enables \`git clone\` via SSH inside the container.
### Git Configuration
- **Git Name / Email** — Sets \`git config user.name\` and \`user.email\` inside the container.
- **Git HTTPS Token** — A personal access token (e.g., from GitHub) for HTTPS git operations. Stored securely in your OS keychain — never written to disk in plaintext.
### Allow Container Spawning
When enabled, the host Docker socket is mounted into the container so Claude Code can create sibling containers (e.g., for running databases, test environments). This is **off by default** for security.
> Toggling this requires stopping and restarting the container to take effect.
### Mission Control
Toggle **Mission Control** to integrate Flight Control — an AI-first development methodology — into the project. When enabled:
- The Flight Control repository is automatically cloned into the container
- Flight Control skills are installed to Claude Code's skill directory (\`~/.claude/skills/\`)
- Project instructions are appended with Flight Control workflow guidance
- The repository is symlinked at \`/workspace/mission-control\`
Available skills include \`/mission\`, \`/flight\`, \`/leg\`, \`/agentic-workflow\`, \`/flight-debrief\`, \`/mission-debrief\`, \`/daily-briefing\`, and \`/init-project\`.
> This setting can only be changed when the container is stopped. Toggling it triggers a container recreation on the next start.
### Environment Variables
Click **Edit** to open the environment variables modal. Add key-value pairs that will be injected into the container. Per-project variables override global variables with the same key.
> Reserved prefixes (\`ANTHROPIC_\`, \`AWS_\`, \`GIT_\`, \`HOST_\`, \`CLAUDE_\`, \`TRIPLE_C_\`) are filtered out to prevent conflicts with internal variables.
### Port Mappings
Click **Edit** to map host ports to container ports. This is useful when Claude Code starts a web server or other service inside the container and you want to access it from your host browser.
Each mapping specifies:
- **Host Port** — The port on your machine (1-65535)
- **Container Port** — The port inside the container (1-65535)
- **Protocol** — TCP (default) or UDP
### Claude Instructions
Click **Edit** to write per-project instructions for Claude Code. These are written to \`~/.claude/CLAUDE.md\` inside the container and provide project-specific context. If you also have global instructions (in Settings), the global instructions come first, followed by the per-project instructions.
---
## MCP Servers (Beta)
Triple-C supports Model Context Protocol (MCP) servers, which extend Claude Code with access to external tools and data sources. MCP servers are configured in a **global library** and **enabled per-project**.
### How It Works
There are two dimensions to MCP server configuration:
| | **Manual** (no Docker image) | **Docker** (Docker image specified) |
|---|---|---|
| **Stdio** | Command runs inside the project container | Command runs in a separate MCP container via \`docker exec\` |
| **HTTP** | Connects to a URL you provide | Runs in a separate container, reached by hostname on a shared Docker network |
**Docker images are pulled automatically** if not already present when the project starts.
### Accessing MCP Configuration
Click the **MCP** tab in the sidebar to open the MCP server library. This is where you define all available MCP servers.
### Adding an MCP Server
1. Type a name in the input field and click **Add**.
2. Expand the server card and configure it.
The key decision is whether to set a **Docker Image**:
- **With Docker image** — The MCP server runs in its own isolated container. Best for servers that need specific dependencies or system-level packages.
- **Without Docker image** (manual) — The command runs directly inside your project container. Best for lightweight npx-based servers that just need Node.js.
Then choose the **Transport Type**:
- **Stdio** — The MCP server communicates over stdin/stdout. This is the most common type.
- **HTTP** — The MCP server exposes an HTTP endpoint (streamable HTTP transport).
### Configuration Examples
#### Example 1: Filesystem Server (Stdio, Manual)
A simple npx-based server that runs inside the project container. No Docker image needed since Node.js is already installed.
| Field | Value |
|-------|-------|
| **Docker Image** | *(empty)* |
| **Transport** | Stdio |
| **Command** | \`npx\` |
| **Arguments** | \`-y @modelcontextprotocol/server-filesystem /workspace\` |
#### Example 2: GitHub Server (Stdio, Manual)
Another npx-based server, with an environment variable for authentication.
| Field | Value |
|-------|-------|
| **Docker Image** | *(empty)* |
| **Transport** | Stdio |
| **Command** | \`npx\` |
| **Arguments** | \`-y @modelcontextprotocol/server-github\` |
| **Environment Variables** | \`GITHUB_PERSONAL_ACCESS_TOKEN\` = \`ghp_your_token\` |
#### Example 3: Custom MCP Server (HTTP, Docker)
An MCP server packaged as a Docker image that exposes an HTTP endpoint.
| Field | Value |
|-------|-------|
| **Docker Image** | \`myregistry/my-mcp-server:latest\` |
| **Transport** | HTTP |
| **Container Port** | \`8080\` |
| **Environment Variables** | \`API_KEY\` = \`your_key\` |
#### Example 4: Database Server (Stdio, Docker)
An MCP server that needs its own runtime environment, communicating over stdio.
| Field | Value |
|-------|-------|
| **Docker Image** | \`mcp/postgres-server:latest\` |
| **Transport** | Stdio |
| **Command** | \`node\` |
| **Arguments** | \`dist/index.js\` |
| **Environment Variables** | \`DATABASE_URL\` = \`postgresql://user:pass@host:5432/db\` |
### Enabling MCP Servers Per-Project
In a project's configuration panel (click **Config**), the **MCP Servers** section shows checkboxes for all globally defined servers. Toggle each server on or off for that project. Changes take effect on the next container start.
### How Docker-Based MCP Works
When a project with Docker-based MCP servers starts:
1. Missing Docker images are **automatically pulled** (progress shown in the progress modal)
2. A dedicated **bridge network** is created for the project (\`triple-c-net-{projectId}\`)
3. Each enabled Docker MCP server gets its own container on that network
4. The main project container is connected to the same network
5. MCP server configuration is written to \`~/.claude.json\` inside the container
**Networking**: Docker-based MCP containers are reached by their container name as a hostname (e.g., \`triple-c-mcp-{serverId}\`), not by \`localhost\`. Docker DNS resolves these names automatically on the shared bridge network.
**Stdio + Docker**: The project container uses \`docker exec\` to communicate with the MCP container over stdin/stdout. This automatically enables Docker socket access on the project container.
**HTTP + Docker**: The project container connects to the MCP container's HTTP endpoint using the container hostname and port (e.g., \`http://triple-c-mcp-{serverId}:3000/mcp\`).
**Manual (no Docker image)**: Stdio commands run directly inside the project container. HTTP URLs connect to wherever you point them (could be an external service or something running on the host).
### Configuration Change Detection
MCP server configuration is tracked via SHA-256 fingerprints stored as Docker labels. If you add, remove, or modify MCP servers for a project, the container is automatically recreated on the next start to apply the new configuration. The container filesystem is snapshotted first, so installed packages are preserved.
---
## AWS Bedrock Configuration
To use Claude via AWS Bedrock instead of Anthropic's API, switch the backend to **Bedrock** on the project card.
### Authentication Methods
| Method | Fields | Use Case |
|--------|--------|----------|
| **Keys** | Access Key ID, Secret Access Key, Session Token (optional) | Direct credentials — simplest setup |
| **Profile** | AWS Profile name | Uses \`~/.aws/config\` and \`~/.aws/credentials\` on the host |
| **Token** | Bearer Token | Temporary bearer token authentication |
### Additional Bedrock Settings
- **AWS Region** — Required. The region where your Bedrock models are deployed (e.g., \`us-east-1\`).
- **Model ID** — Optional. Override the default Claude model (e.g., \`anthropic.claude-sonnet-4-20250514-v1:0\`).
### Global AWS Defaults
In **Settings > AWS Configuration**, you can set defaults that apply to all Bedrock projects:
- **AWS Config Path** — Path to your \`~/.aws\` directory. Click **Detect** to auto-find it.
- **Default Profile** — Select from profiles found in your AWS config.
- **Default Region** — Fallback region for projects that don't specify one.
Per-project settings always override these global defaults.
---
## Ollama Configuration
To use Claude Code with a local or remote Ollama server, switch the backend to **Ollama** on the project card.
### Settings
- **Base URL** — The URL of your Ollama server. Defaults to \`http://host.docker.internal:11434\`, which reaches a locally running Ollama instance from inside the container. For a remote server, use its IP or hostname (e.g., \`http://192.168.1.100:11434\`).
- **Model ID** — Optional. Override the model to use (e.g., \`qwen3.5:27b\`).
### How It Works
Triple-C sets \`ANTHROPIC_BASE_URL\` to point Claude Code at your Ollama server instead of Anthropic's API. The \`ANTHROPIC_AUTH_TOKEN\` is set to \`ollama\` (required by Claude Code but not used for actual authentication).
> **Note:** Ollama support is best-effort. Claude Code is designed for Anthropic models, so some features (tool use, extended thinking, prompt caching, etc.) may not work as expected with non-Anthropic models.
---
## LiteLLM Configuration
To use Claude Code through a LiteLLM proxy gateway, switch the backend to **LiteLLM** on the project card. LiteLLM supports 100+ model providers (OpenAI, Gemini, Anthropic, and more) through a single proxy.
### Settings
- **Base URL** — The URL of your LiteLLM proxy. Defaults to \`http://host.docker.internal:4000\` for a locally running proxy.
- **API Key** — Optional. The API key for your LiteLLM proxy, if authentication is required. Stored securely in your OS keychain.
- **Model ID** — Optional. Override the model to use.
### How It Works
Triple-C sets \`ANTHROPIC_BASE_URL\` to point Claude Code at your LiteLLM proxy. If an API key is provided, it is set as \`ANTHROPIC_AUTH_TOKEN\`.
> **Note:** LiteLLM support is best-effort. Claude Code is designed for Anthropic models, so some features (tool use, extended thinking, prompt caching, etc.) may not work as expected when routing to non-Anthropic models through the proxy.
---
## Settings
Access global settings via the **Settings** tab in the sidebar.
### Docker Settings
- **Docker Status** — Connection status to the Docker daemon.
- **Image Source** — Where to get the sandbox container image (Registry, Local Build, or Custom).
- **Pull / Build Image** — Download or build the image. Progress streams in real time.
- **Refresh** — Re-check Docker and image status.
### Container Timezone
Set the timezone for all containers (IANA format, e.g., \`America/New_York\`, \`Europe/London\`, \`UTC\`). Auto-detected from your host on first launch. This affects scheduled task timing inside containers.
### Global Claude Instructions
Instructions applied to **all** projects. Written to \`~/.claude/CLAUDE.md\` in every container, before any per-project instructions.
### Global Environment Variables
Environment variables applied to **all** project containers. Per-project variables with the same key take precedence.
### Updates
- **Current Version** — The installed version of Triple-C.
- **Auto-check** — Toggle automatic update checks (every 24 hours).
- **Check now** — Manually check for updates.
When an update is available, a pulsing **Update** button appears in the top bar. Click it to see release notes and download links.
---
## Terminal Features
### Multiple Sessions
You can open multiple terminal sessions (even for the same project). Each session gets its own tab in the top bar. Click a tab to switch, or click the **x** on a tab to close it. Tabs show the project name, with a "(bash)" suffix for shell sessions.
### Bash Shell Sessions
In addition to Claude Code terminals, you can open a plain **bash login shell** in any running container by clicking the **Shell** button. This is useful for manual inspection, package installation, debugging, or running commands that don't need Claude Code.
### URL Detection
When Claude Code prints a long URL (e.g., during \`claude login\`), Triple-C detects it and shows a toast notification at the top of the terminal with an **Open** button. Clicking it opens the URL in your default browser. The toast auto-dismisses after 30 seconds.
Shorter URLs in terminal output are also clickable directly.
### Clipboard Support (OSC 52)
Programs inside the container can copy text to your host clipboard. When a container program uses \`xclip\`, \`xsel\`, or \`pbcopy\`, the text is transparently forwarded to your host clipboard via OSC 52 escape sequences. No additional configuration is required — this works out of the box.
### Image Paste
You can paste images from your clipboard into the terminal (Ctrl+V / Cmd+V). The image is uploaded to the container as \`/tmp/clipboard_<timestamp>.png\` and the file path is injected into the terminal input so Claude Code can reference it. A toast notification confirms the upload.
### Jump to Current
When you scroll up in the terminal to review previous output, a **Jump to Current** button appears in the bottom-right corner. Click it to scroll back to the latest output.
### File Manager
Click the **Files** button on a running project to open the file manager modal. You can:
- **Browse** the container filesystem starting from \`/workspace\`, with breadcrumb navigation
- **Download** any file to your host machine via the download button on each file entry
- **Upload** files from your host into the current container directory
- **Refresh** the directory listing at any time
The file manager shows file names, sizes, and modification dates.
### Terminal Rendering
The terminal uses WebGL for hardware-accelerated rendering of the active tab. Inactive tabs fall back to canvas rendering to conserve GPU resources. The terminal automatically resizes when you resize the window.
---
## Scheduled Tasks (Inside the Container)
Once inside a running container terminal, you can set up recurring or one-time tasks using \`triple-c-scheduler\`. Tasks run as separate Claude Code sessions.
### Create a Recurring Task
\`\`\`bash
triple-c-scheduler add --name "daily-review" --schedule "0 9 * * *" --prompt "Review open issues and summarize"
\`\`\`
### Create a One-Time Task
\`\`\`bash
triple-c-scheduler add --name "migrate-db" --at "2026-03-05 14:00" --prompt "Run database migrations"
\`\`\`
One-time tasks automatically remove themselves after execution.
### Manage Tasks
\`\`\`bash
triple-c-scheduler list # List all tasks
triple-c-scheduler enable --id abc123 # Enable a task
triple-c-scheduler disable --id abc123 # Disable a task
triple-c-scheduler remove --id abc123 # Delete a task
triple-c-scheduler run --id abc123 # Trigger a task immediately
triple-c-scheduler logs --id abc123 # View logs for a task
triple-c-scheduler logs --tail 20 # View last 20 log entries (all tasks)
triple-c-scheduler notifications # View completion notifications
triple-c-scheduler notifications --clear # Clear notifications
\`\`\`
### Cron Schedule Format
Standard 5-field cron: \`minute hour day-of-month month day-of-week\`
| Example | Meaning |
|---------|---------|
| \`*/30 * * * *\` | Every 30 minutes |
| \`0 9 * * 1-5\` | 9:00 AM on weekdays |
| \`0 */2 * * *\` | Every 2 hours |
| \`0 0 1 * *\` | Midnight on the 1st of each month |
### Working Directory
By default, tasks run in \`/workspace\`. Use \`--working-dir\` to specify a different directory:
\`\`\`bash
triple-c-scheduler add --name "test" --schedule "0 */6 * * *" --prompt "Run tests" --working-dir /workspace/my-project
\`\`\`
---
## What's Inside the Container
The sandbox container (Ubuntu 24.04) comes pre-installed with:
| Tool | Version | Purpose |
|------|---------|---------|
| Claude Code | Latest | AI coding assistant (the tool being sandboxed) |
| Node.js | 22 LTS | JavaScript/TypeScript development |
| pnpm | Latest | Fast Node.js package manager |
| Python | 3.12 | Python development |
| uv | Latest | Fast Python package manager |
| ruff | Latest | Python linter/formatter |
| Rust | Stable | Rust development (via rustup) |
| Docker CLI | Latest | Container management (when spawning is enabled) |
| git | Latest | Version control |
| GitHub CLI (gh) | Latest | GitHub integration |
| AWS CLI | v2 | AWS services and Bedrock |
| ripgrep | Latest | Fast code search |
| build-essential | — | C/C++ compiler toolchain |
| openssh-client | — | SSH for git and remote access |
The container also includes **clipboard shims** (\`xclip\`, \`xsel\`, \`pbcopy\`) that forward copy operations to the host via OSC 52, and an **audio shim** (\`rec\`, \`arecord\`) for future voice mode support.
You can install additional tools at runtime with \`sudo apt install\`, \`pip install\`, \`npm install -g\`, etc. Installed packages persist across container stops (but not across resets).
---
## Troubleshooting
### Docker is "Not Available"
- **Is Docker running?** Start Docker Desktop or the Docker daemon (\`sudo systemctl start docker\`).
- **Permissions?** On Linux, ensure your user is in the \`docker\` group or the socket is accessible.
- **Custom socket path?** If your Docker socket is not at the default location, set it in Settings. The app expects \`/var/run/docker.sock\` on Linux/macOS or \`//./pipe/docker_engine\` on Windows.
### Image is "Not Found"
- Click **Pull Image** or **Build Image** in Settings > Docker.
- If pulling fails, check your network connection and whether you can reach the registry.
- Try switching to **Local Build** as an alternative.
### Container Won't Start
- Check that the Docker image is "Ready" in Settings.
- Verify that the mounted folder paths exist on your host.
- Look at the error message displayed in the progress modal.
### OAuth Login URL Not Opening
- Triple-C detects long URLs printed by \`claude login\` and shows a toast with an **Open** button.
- If the toast doesn't appear, try scrolling up in the terminal — the URL may have already been printed.
- You can also manually copy the URL from the terminal output and paste it into your browser.
### File Permission Issues
- Triple-C automatically remaps the container user's UID/GID to match your host user, so files created inside the container should have the correct ownership on your host.
- If you see permission errors, try resetting the container (stop, then click **Reset**).
### Settings Won't Save
- Most project settings can only be changed when the container is **stopped**. Stop the container first, make your changes, then start it again.
- Some changes (like toggling Docker access, Mission Control, or changing mounted folders) trigger an automatic container recreation on the next start.
### MCP Containers Not Starting
- Ensure the Docker image for the MCP server exists (pull it first if needed).
- Check that Docker socket access is available (stdio + Docker MCP servers auto-enable this).
- Try resetting the project container to force a clean recreation.`;
/** Convert header text to a URL-friendly slug for anchor links. */
function slugify(text: string): string {
return text
.toLowerCase()
.replace(/<[^>]+>/g, "") // strip HTML tags (e.g. from inline code)
.replace(/[^\w\s-]/g, "") // remove non-word chars except spaces/dashes
.replace(/\s+/g, "-") // spaces to dashes
.replace(/-+/g, "-") // collapse consecutive dashes
.replace(/^-|-$/g, ""); // trim leading/trailing dashes
}
/** Simple markdown-to-HTML converter for the help content. */
function renderMarkdown(md: string): string {
@@ -666,11 +67,11 @@ function renderMarkdown(md: string): string {
// Horizontal rules
html = html.replace(/\n---\n/g, '<hr class="help-hr"/>');
// Headers (process from h4 down to h1)
html = html.replace(/^#### (.+)$/gm, '<h4 class="help-h4">$1</h4>');
html = html.replace(/^### (.+)$/gm, '<h3 class="help-h3">$1</h3>');
html = html.replace(/^## (.+)$/gm, '<h2 class="help-h2">$1</h2>');
html = html.replace(/^# (.+)$/gm, '<h1 class="help-h1">$1</h1>');
// Headers with id attributes for anchor navigation (process from h4 down to h1)
html = html.replace(/^#### (.+)$/gm, (_m, title) => `<h4 class="help-h4" id="${slugify(title)}">${title}</h4>`);
html = html.replace(/^### (.+)$/gm, (_m, title) => `<h3 class="help-h3" id="${slugify(title)}">${title}</h3>`);
html = html.replace(/^## (.+)$/gm, (_m, title) => `<h2 class="help-h2" id="${slugify(title)}">${title}</h2>`);
html = html.replace(/^# (.+)$/gm, (_m, title) => `<h1 class="help-h1" id="${slugify(title)}">${title}</h1>`);
// Bold (**...**)
html = html.replace(/\*\*([^*]+)\*\*/g, "<strong>$1</strong>");
@@ -678,6 +79,18 @@ function renderMarkdown(md: string): string {
// Italic (*...*)
html = html.replace(/\*([^*]+)\*/g, "<em>$1</em>");
// Markdown-style anchor links [text](#anchor)
html = html.replace(
/\[([^\]]+)\]\(#([^)]+)\)/g,
'<a class="help-link" href="#$2">$1</a>',
);
// Markdown-style external links [text](url)
html = html.replace(
/\[([^\]]+)\]\((https?:\/\/[^)]+)\)/g,
'<a class="help-link" href="$2" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer">$1</a>',
);
// Unordered list items (- ...)
// Group consecutive list items
html = html.replace(/((?:^|\n)- .+(?:\n- .+)*)/g, (block) => {
@@ -699,7 +112,7 @@ function renderMarkdown(md: string): string {
return `<ol class="help-ol">${items}</ol>`;
});
// Links - convert URLs to clickable links
// Links - convert bare URLs to clickable links (skip already-wrapped URLs)
html = html.replace(
/(?<!="|'>)(https?:\/\/[^\s<)]+)/g,
'<a class="help-link" href="$1" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer">$1</a>',
@@ -728,6 +141,9 @@ function renderMarkdown(md: string): string {
export default function HelpDialog({ onClose }: Props) {
const overlayRef = useRef<HTMLDivElement>(null);
const contentRef = useRef<HTMLDivElement>(null);
const [markdown, setMarkdown] = useState<string | null>(null);
const [error, setError] = useState<string | null>(null);
useEffect(() => {
const handleKeyDown = (e: KeyboardEvent) => {
@@ -737,6 +153,12 @@ export default function HelpDialog({ onClose }: Props) {
return () => document.removeEventListener("keydown", handleKeyDown);
}, [onClose]);
useEffect(() => {
getHelpContent()
.then(setMarkdown)
.catch((e) => setError(String(e)));
}, []);
const handleOverlayClick = useCallback(
(e: React.MouseEvent<HTMLDivElement>) => {
if (e.target === overlayRef.current) onClose();
@@ -744,7 +166,17 @@ export default function HelpDialog({ onClose }: Props) {
[onClose],
);
const renderedHtml = renderMarkdown(HELP_MARKDOWN);
// Handle anchor link clicks to scroll within the dialog
const handleContentClick = useCallback((e: React.MouseEvent<HTMLDivElement>) => {
const target = e.target as HTMLElement;
const anchor = target.closest("a");
if (!anchor) return;
const href = anchor.getAttribute("href");
if (!href || !href.startsWith("#")) return;
e.preventDefault();
const el = contentRef.current?.querySelector(href);
if (el) el.scrollIntoView({ behavior: "smooth" });
}, []);
return (
<div
@@ -766,9 +198,20 @@ export default function HelpDialog({ onClose }: Props) {
{/* Scrollable content */}
<div
ref={contentRef}
onClick={handleContentClick}
className="flex-1 overflow-y-auto px-6 py-4 help-content"
dangerouslySetInnerHTML={{ __html: renderedHtml }}
/>
>
{error && (
<p className="text-[var(--error)] text-sm">Failed to load help content: {error}</p>
)}
{!markdown && !error && (
<p className="text-[var(--text-secondary)] text-sm">Loading...</p>
)}
{markdown && (
<div dangerouslySetInnerHTML={{ __html: renderMarkdown(markdown) }} />
)}
</div>
</div>
</div>
);

View File

@@ -2,8 +2,8 @@ import { useShallow } from "zustand/react/shallow";
import { useAppState } from "../../store/appState";
export default function StatusBar() {
const { projects, sessions } = useAppState(
useShallow(s => ({ projects: s.projects, sessions: s.sessions }))
const { projects, sessions, terminalHasSelection } = useAppState(
useShallow(s => ({ projects: s.projects, sessions: s.sessions, terminalHasSelection: s.terminalHasSelection }))
);
const running = projects.filter((p) => p.status === "running").length;
@@ -20,6 +20,12 @@ export default function StatusBar() {
<span>
{sessions.length} terminal{sessions.length !== 1 ? "s" : ""}
</span>
{terminalHasSelection && (
<>
<span className="mx-2">|</span>
<span className="text-[var(--accent)]">Ctrl+Shift+C to copy</span>
</>
)}
</div>
);
}

View File

@@ -449,7 +449,7 @@ export default function ProjectCard({ project }: Props) {
<div className="mt-2 ml-4 space-y-2 min-w-0 overflow-hidden">
{/* Backend selector */}
<div className="flex items-center gap-1 text-xs">
<span className="text-[var(--text-secondary)] mr-1">Backend:<Tooltip text="Anthropic = direct Claude API via OAuth. Bedrock = AWS Bedrock. Ollama = local models. LiteLLM = proxy gateway for 100+ providers." /></span>
<span className="text-[var(--text-secondary)] mr-1">Backend:<Tooltip text="Choose the AI model provider for this project. Anthropic: Connect directly to Claude via OAuth login (run 'claude login' in terminal). Bedrock: Route through AWS Bedrock using your AWS credentials. Ollama: Use locally-hosted open-source models (Llama, Mistral, etc.) via an Ollama server. LiteLLM: Connect through a LiteLLM proxy gateway to access 100+ model providers (OpenAI, Azure, Gemini, etc.)." /></span>
<select
value={project.backend}
onChange={(e) => { e.stopPropagation(); handleBackendChange(e.target.value as Backend); }}
@@ -942,7 +942,7 @@ export default function ProjectCard({ project }: Props) {
</div>
<div>
<label className="block text-xs text-[var(--text-secondary)] mb-0.5">Model (optional)<Tooltip text="Ollama model name to use (e.g. qwen3.5:27b). Leave blank for the server default." /></label>
<label className="block text-xs text-[var(--text-secondary)] mb-0.5">Model (required)<Tooltip text="Ollama model name to use (e.g. qwen3.5:27b). The model must be pulled in Ollama before starting the container." /></label>
<input
value={ollamaModelId}
onChange={(e) => setOllamaModelId(e.target.value)}

View File

@@ -24,6 +24,7 @@ export default function TerminalView({ sessionId, active }: Props) {
const webglRef = useRef<WebglAddon | null>(null);
const detectorRef = useRef<UrlDetector | null>(null);
const { sendInput, pasteImage, resize, onOutput, onExit } = useTerminal();
const setTerminalHasSelection = useAppState(s => s.setTerminalHasSelection);
const ssoBufferRef = useRef("");
const ssoTriggeredRef = useRef(false);
@@ -80,6 +81,22 @@ export default function TerminalView({ sessionId, active }: Props) {
term.open(containerRef.current);
// Ctrl+Shift+C copies selected terminal text to clipboard.
// This prevents the keystroke from reaching the container (where
// Ctrl+C would send SIGINT and cancel running work).
term.attachCustomKeyEventHandler((event) => {
if (event.type === "keydown" && event.ctrlKey && event.shiftKey && event.key === "C") {
const sel = term.getSelection();
if (sel) {
navigator.clipboard.writeText(sel).catch((e) =>
console.error("Ctrl+Shift+C clipboard write failed:", e),
);
}
return false; // prevent xterm from processing this key
}
return true;
});
// WebGL addon is loaded/disposed dynamically in the active effect
// to avoid exhausting the browser's limited WebGL context pool.
@@ -120,6 +137,11 @@ export default function TerminalView({ sessionId, active }: Props) {
setIsAtBottom(buf.viewportY >= buf.baseY);
});
// Track text selection to show copy hint in status bar
const selectionDisposable = term.onSelectionChange(() => {
setTerminalHasSelection(term.hasSelection());
});
// Handle image paste: intercept paste events with image data,
// upload to the container, and inject the file path into terminal input.
const handlePaste = (e: ClipboardEvent) => {
@@ -222,6 +244,8 @@ export default function TerminalView({ sessionId, active }: Props) {
osc52Disposable.dispose();
inputDisposable.dispose();
scrollDisposable.dispose();
selectionDisposable.dispose();
setTerminalHasSelection(false);
containerRef.current?.removeEventListener("paste", handlePaste, { capture: true });
outputPromise.then((fn) => fn?.());
exitPromise.then((fn) => fn?.());

View File

@@ -1,4 +1,5 @@
import { useState, useRef, useEffect, type ReactNode } from "react";
import { useState, useRef, useLayoutEffect, type ReactNode } from "react";
import { createPortal } from "react-dom";
interface TooltipProps {
text: string;
@@ -7,53 +8,44 @@ interface TooltipProps {
/**
* A small circled question-mark icon that shows a tooltip on hover.
* Renders inline and automatically repositions to stay within the viewport.
* Uses a portal to render at `document.body` so the tooltip is never
* clipped by ancestor `overflow: hidden` containers.
*/
export default function Tooltip({ text, children }: TooltipProps) {
const [visible, setVisible] = useState(false);
const [position, setPosition] = useState<"top" | "bottom">("top");
const [align, setAlign] = useState<"center" | "left" | "right">("center");
const [coords, setCoords] = useState({ top: 0, left: 0 });
const [, setPlacement] = useState<"top" | "bottom">("top");
const triggerRef = useRef<HTMLSpanElement>(null);
const tooltipRef = useRef<HTMLDivElement>(null);
useEffect(() => {
useLayoutEffect(() => {
if (!visible || !triggerRef.current || !tooltipRef.current) return;
const triggerRect = triggerRef.current.getBoundingClientRect();
const tooltipRect = tooltipRef.current.getBoundingClientRect();
const trigger = triggerRef.current.getBoundingClientRect();
const tooltip = tooltipRef.current.getBoundingClientRect();
const gap = 6;
// Decide vertical position: prefer top, fall back to bottom
if (triggerRect.top - tooltipRect.height - 6 < 4) {
setPosition("bottom");
} else {
setPosition("top");
}
// Vertical: prefer above, fall back to below
const above = trigger.top - tooltip.height - gap >= 4;
const pos = above ? "top" : "bottom";
setPlacement(pos);
// Decide horizontal alignment
const centerLeft = triggerRect.left + triggerRect.width / 2 - tooltipRect.width / 2;
const centerRight = centerLeft + tooltipRect.width;
if (centerLeft < 4) {
setAlign("left");
} else if (centerRight > window.innerWidth - 4) {
setAlign("right");
} else {
setAlign("center");
}
const top =
pos === "top"
? trigger.top - tooltip.height - gap
: trigger.bottom + gap;
// Horizontal: center on trigger, clamp to viewport
let left = trigger.left + trigger.width / 2 - tooltip.width / 2;
left = Math.max(4, Math.min(left, window.innerWidth - tooltip.width - 4));
setCoords({ top, left });
}, [visible]);
const positionClasses = position === "top" ? "bottom-full mb-1.5" : "top-full mt-1.5";
const alignClasses =
align === "left"
? "left-0"
: align === "right"
? "right-0"
: "left-1/2 -translate-x-1/2";
return (
<span
ref={triggerRef}
className="relative inline-flex items-center ml-1"
className="inline-flex items-center ml-1"
onMouseEnter={() => setVisible(true)}
onMouseLeave={() => setVisible(false)}
>
@@ -65,14 +57,22 @@ export default function Tooltip({ text, children }: TooltipProps) {
?
</span>
)}
{visible && (
<div
ref={tooltipRef}
className={`absolute z-50 ${positionClasses} ${alignClasses} px-2.5 py-1.5 text-[11px] leading-snug text-[var(--text-primary)] bg-[var(--bg-tertiary)] border border-[var(--border-color)] rounded shadow-lg whitespace-normal max-w-[220px] w-max pointer-events-none`}
>
{text}
</div>
)}
{visible &&
createPortal(
<div
ref={tooltipRef}
style={{
position: "fixed",
top: coords.top,
left: coords.left,
zIndex: 9999,
}}
className={`px-2.5 py-1.5 text-[11px] leading-snug text-[var(--text-primary)] bg-[var(--bg-tertiary)] border border-[var(--border-color)] rounded shadow-lg whitespace-normal max-w-[280px] w-max pointer-events-none`}
>
{text}
</div>,
document.body
)}
</span>
);
}

View File

@@ -85,3 +85,6 @@ export const checkForUpdates = () =>
invoke<UpdateInfo | null>("check_for_updates");
export const checkImageUpdate = () =>
invoke<ImageUpdateInfo | null>("check_image_update");
// Help
export const getHelpContent = () => invoke<string>("get_help_content");

View File

@@ -24,6 +24,8 @@ interface AppState {
removeMcpServerFromList: (id: string) => void;
// UI state
terminalHasSelection: boolean;
setTerminalHasSelection: (has: boolean) => void;
sidebarView: "projects" | "mcp" | "settings";
setSidebarView: (view: "projects" | "mcp" | "settings") => void;
dockerAvailable: boolean | null;
@@ -100,6 +102,8 @@ export const useAppState = create<AppState>((set) => ({
})),
// UI state
terminalHasSelection: false,
setTerminalHasSelection: (has) => set({ terminalHasSelection: has }),
sidebarView: "projects",
setSidebarView: (view) => set({ sidebarView: view }),
dockerAvailable: null,