I also default my shell to bash. I might look into wezterm to see if I can get it working with that one. Thanks for the tip about buffer local On Tue, Nov 26, 2024 at 7:00 AM Ship Mints wrote: > Check that your default shell supports the function. I understand later > macOS defaults to zsh which I have no experience with. I use macOS but I > default my shell to bash. If you have an alternate terminal like > Wezterm you could verify your shell settings there > https://wezfurlong.org/wezterm/shell-integration.html#osc-7-escape-sequence-to-set-the-working-directory > > As far as your osc filter goes, I think it would be better to install it > buffer-locally in a shell-mode-hook so you don't interfere with other > comint uses. > > (defun my/shell-mode-hook () > (shell-dirtrack-mode -1) > (add-hook 'comint-output-filter-functions #'comint-osc-process-output > nil 'local)) > (add-hook 'shell-mode-hook #'my/shell-mode-hook) > > On Tue, Nov 26, 2024 at 3:16 AM Colton Goates > wrote: > >> I don't know how dirtrack would tell the difference between a prompt >> output and other printed output. I just thought of the edge case and >> decided to point it out in case someone knew of a solution. Thanks for >> responding. >> >> On Mon, Nov 25, 2024 at 11:55 AM Eli Zaretskii wrote: >> >>> > From: Colton Goates >>> > Date: Mon, 25 Nov 2024 10:27:00 -0700 >>> > Cc: 74524@debbugs.gnu.org >>> > >>> > Coltons-MacBook-Pro:/Users/coltongoates/software-dev/$ isn't intended >>> to be a directory name, it's a string >>> > that's intended to look exactly like my prompt. (I know it's pretty >>> contrived.) >>> > >>> > So, if someone prints something that resembles their prompt, dirtrack >>> will change the directory, because >>> > dirtrack thinks it just saw the shell prompt appear, but it really >>> just saw a string that resembles the prompt. >>> > Does that make more sense now? >>> >>> What do you expect dirtrack to do when you deliberately try to deceive >>> it? AFAIU, dirtrack is a piece of heuristic ad-hocery (as explained >>> in its commentary), so it cannot be expected to survive such >>> deception. What kind of changes would you suggest to consider to >>> handle the cases such as this one? >>> >>