## Why
`voice-input` is the only remaining TUI crate feature, but it is also a
default feature and nothing in the workspace selects it explicitly. In
practice it is just acting as a proxy for platform support, which is
better expressed with target-specific dependencies and cfgs.
## What changed
- remove the `voice-input` feature from `codex-tui`
- make `cpal` a normal non-Linux target dependency
- replace the feature-based voice and audio cfgs with pure
Linux-vs-non-Linux cfgs
- shrink the workspace-manifest verifier allowlist to remove the
remaining `codex-tui` exception
## How tested
- `python3 .github/scripts/verify_cargo_workspace_manifests.py`
- `cargo test -p codex-tui`
- `just bazel-lock-check`
- `just argument-comment-lint -p codex-tui`
This is a follow-up to https://github.com/openai/codex/pull/15922. That
previous PR deleted the old `tui` directory and left the new
`tui_app_server` directory in place. This PR renames `tui_app_server` to
`tui` and fixes up all references.
This is the part 1 of 2 PRs that will delete the `tui` /
`tui_app_server` split. This part simply deletes the existing `tui`
directory and marks the `tui_app_server` feature flag as removed. I left
the `tui_app_server` feature flag in place for now so its presence
doesn't result in an error. It is simply ignored.
Part 2 will rename the `tui_app_server` directory `tui`. I did this as
two parts to reduce visible code churn.
Wait for newlines, then render markdown on a line by line basis. Word wrap it for the current terminal size and then spit it out line by line into the UI. Also adds tests and fixes some UI regressions.
Moving to Rust 1.87 introduced a clippy warning that
`SendError<AppEvent>` was too large.
In practice, the only thing we ever did when we got this error was log
it (if the mspc channel is closed, then the app is likely shutting down
or something, so there's not much to do...), so this finally motivated
me to introduce `AppEventSender`, which wraps
`std::sync::mpsc::Sender<AppEvent>` with a `send()` method that invokes
`send()` on the underlying `Sender` and logs an `Err` if it gets one.
This greatly simplifies the code, as many functions that previously
returned `Result<(), SendError<AppEvent>>` now return `()`, so we don't
have to propagate an `Err` all over the place that we don't really
handle, anyway.
This also makes it so we can upgrade to Rust 1.87 in CI.