This uses a hash of the tunnel ID to create the connection token, which
should be sufficient to resolve the issues.
We also now publish the protocol version in the tunnel tags, since the
connection token must be supplied in the resolver, which is before we
start connecting to the tunnel.
See https://github.com/microsoft/vscode-internalbacklog/issues/3287
systemd, like most 'modern' linux components, has a nice dbus API. This uses
that API to register the tunnel as a service of the calling user.
The dbus dependency is temporarily duplicated, until secret-service 3 is
released, where they update to the latest version (should be a week or two).
For https://github.com/microsoft/vscode-cli/issues/367. Next up, macOS,
then it's done :)
The standalone CLI should detect and fall back to using and
system-installed VS Code instance, rather than trying to download zips
and manage its own VS Code instances.
There are three approaches used for discovery:
- On Windows, we can easily and quickly read the register to find
installed versions based on their app ID.
- On macOS, we initially look in `/Applications` and fall back to the
slow `system_profiler` command to list app .app's if that fails.
- On Linux, we just look in the PATH. I believe all Linux installers
(snap, dep, rpm) automatically add VS Code to the user's PATH.
Failing this, the user can also manually specify their installation dir,
using the command `code version use stable --install-dir /path/to/vscode`.
Fixes#164159