NAME
    Term::Detect::Software - Detect terminal (emulator) software and its
    capabilities

VERSION
    This document describes version 0.226 of Term::Detect::Software (from
    Perl distribution Term-Detect-Software), released on 2024-02-10.

SYNOPSIS
     use Term::Detect::Software qw(detect_terminal detect_terminal_cached);
     my $res = detect_terminal();
     die "Not running under terminal!" unless $res->{emulator_engine};
     say "Emulator engine: ", $res->{emulator_engine};
     say "Emulator software: ", $res->{emulator_software};
     say "Unicode support? ", $res->{unicode} ? "yes":"no";
     say "Boxchars support? ", $res->{box_chars} ? "yes":"no";
     say "Color depth: ", $res->{color_depth};
     say "Inside emacs? ", $res->{inside_emacs} ? "yes":"no";

DESCRIPTION
    This module uses several heuristics to find out what terminal (emulator)
    software the current process is running in, and its
    capabilities/settings. This module complements other modules such as
    Term::Terminfo and Term::Encoding.

FUNCTIONS
  detect_terminal() => HASHREF
    Return a hashref containing information about running terminal
    (emulator) software and its capabilities/settings.

    Detection method is tried from the easiest/cheapest (e.g. checking
    environment variables) or by looking at known process names in the
    process tree. Terminal capabilities is determined using heuristics.

    Currently Konsole and Konsole-based terminals (like Yakuake) can be
    detected through existence of environment variables
    "KONSOLE_DBUS_SERVICE" or "KONSOLE_DBUS_SESSION". xterm is detected
    through "XTERM_VERSION". XFCE's Terminal is detected using "COLORTERM".
    The other software are detected via known process names.

    Terminal capabilities and settings are currently determined via
    heuristics. Probing terminal configuration files might be performed in
    the future.

    Result:

    *   emulator_engine => STR

        Possible values: "konsole", "xterm", "gnome-terminal", "rxvt",
        "pterm" (PuTTY), "xvt", "windows" (CMD.EXE), "cygwin", "st"
        (suckless.org's terminal emulator), or empty string (if not detected
        running under terminal).

    *   emulator_software => STR

        Either: "xfce4-terminal", "guake", "gnome-terminal", "mlterm",
        "lxterminal", "rxvt", "mrxvt", "putty", "xvt", "windows" (CMD.EXE),
        "st" (suckless.org's terminal emulator), or empty string (if not
        detected running under terminal).

    *   color_depth => INT

        Either 0 (does not support ANSI color codes), 16, 256, or 16777216
        (2**24).

    *   default_bgcolor => STR (6-hexdigit RGB)

        For example, any xterm is assumed to have white background (ffffff)
        by default, while Konsole is assumed to have black (000000). Better
        heuristics will be done in the future.

    *   unicode => BOOL

        Whether terminal software supports Unicode/wide characters. Note
        that you should also check encoding, e.g. using Term::Encoding.

    *   box_chars => BOOL

        Whether terminal supports box-drawing characters.

  detect_terminal_cached([$flag]) => ANY
    Just like detect_terminal() but will cache the result. Can be used by
    applications or modules to avoid repeating detection process.

FAQ
  What is this module for? Why not Term::Terminfo or Term::Encoding?
    This module was first written for Text::ANSITable so that the latter can
    provide good defaults when displaying formatted and colored tables,
    especially on popular terminal emulation software like Konsole (KDE's
    default terminal), gnome-terminal (GNOME's default), Terminal (XFCE's
    default), xterm, rxvt.

    This module works by trying to figure out the terminal emulation
    software because the information provided by Term::Terminfo and
    Term::Encoding are sometimes not specific enough. For example,
    Term::Encoding can return utf-8 when running under rxvt, but since the
    software currently lacks Unicode support we shouldn't display Unicode
    characters. Another example is color depth: Term::Terminfo currently
    doesn't recognize Konsole's 24bit color support and only gives
    "max_colors" 256.

  Which terminal software are detected?
    See "PERL_TERM_DETECT_SOFTWARE_ENGINE".

  Why is my terminal software not detected?
    By default, some software are not detected because the heuristics to do
    so is considered rather costly. This includes detecting gnome-terminal,
    rxvt, mrxvt, st, pterm/putty, xvt via checking process name, because
    listing all processes and their details costs tens to hundreds of
    milliseconds. See "PERL_TERM_DETECT_SOFTWARE_CHECK_PS" to enable it.

ENVIRONMENT
  PERL_TERM_DETECT_SOFTWARE_CHECK_PS
    By default, some software are not detected because the heuristics to do
    so is considered rather costly. This includes detecting gnome-terminal,
    rxvt, mrxvt, st, pterm/putty, xvt via checking process name, because
    listing all processes and their details costs tens to hundreds of
    milliseconds. To enable this checking, set this environment variable to
    true and install the optional dependency Proc::Find::Parents.

  PERL_TERM_DETECT_SOFTWARE_ENGINE
    String. Explicitly instruct Term::Detect::Software to use a specific
    engine, instead of heuristically trying to detect. This is useful for
    testing or for avoiding sometimes costly detection.

    List of supported engines:

     konsole
     xterm
     cygwin
     linux            # linux virtual console
     gnome-terminal
     windows          # windows command prompt
     dumb             # dumb/generic, e.g. run under CGI or something like that
     rxvt
     st
     putty
     xvt

    For more details on the capabilities of each engine, currently please
    peruse the source code.

HOMEPAGE
    Please visit the project's homepage at
    <https://metacpan.org/release/Term-Detect-Software>.

SOURCE
    Source repository is at
    <https://github.com/perlancar/perl-Term-Detect-Software>.

SEE ALSO
    Term::Terminfo

    Term::Encoding

AUTHOR
    perlancar <perlancar@cpan.org>

CONTRIBUTOR
    Steven Haryanto <stevenharyanto@gmail.com>

CONTRIBUTING
    To contribute, you can send patches by email/via RT, or send pull
    requests on GitHub.

    Most of the time, you don't need to build the distribution yourself. You
    can simply modify the code, then test via:

     % prove -l

    If you want to build the distribution (e.g. to try to install it locally
    on your system), you can install Dist::Zilla,
    Dist::Zilla::PluginBundle::Author::PERLANCAR,
    Pod::Weaver::PluginBundle::Author::PERLANCAR, and sometimes one or two
    other Dist::Zilla- and/or Pod::Weaver plugins. Any additional steps
    required beyond that are considered a bug and can be reported to me.

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
    This software is copyright (c) 2024, 2023, 2020, 2019, 2015, 2014, 2013
    by perlancar <perlancar@cpan.org>.

    This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
    the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.

BUGS
    Please report any bugs or feature requests on the bugtracker website
    <https://rt.cpan.org/Public/Dist/Display.html?Name=Term-Detect-Software>

    When submitting a bug or request, please include a test-file or a patch
    to an existing test-file that illustrates the bug or desired feature.