| name | add-config |
| description | Guide for adding new configuration settings to Wave Terminal. Use when adding a new setting to the configuration system, implementing a new config key, or adding user-customizable settings. |
Adding a New Configuration Setting to Wave Terminal
This guide explains how to add a new configuration setting to Wave Terminal's hierarchical configuration system.
Configuration System Overview
Wave Terminal uses a hierarchical configuration system with:
- Go Struct Definitions - Type-safe configuration structure in
pkg/wconfig/settingsconfig.go
- JSON Schema - Auto-generated validation schema in
schema/settings.json
- Default Values - Built-in defaults in
pkg/wconfig/defaultconfig/settings.json
- User Configuration - User overrides in
~/.config/waveterm/settings.json
- Block Metadata - Block-level overrides in
pkg/waveobj/wtypemeta.go
- Documentation - User-facing docs in
docs/docs/config.mdx
Settings cascade from defaults → user settings → connection config → block overrides.
Step-by-Step Guide
Step 1: Add to Go Struct Definition
Edit pkg/wconfig/settingsconfig.go and add your new field to the SettingsType struct:
type SettingsType struct {
MyNewSetting string `json:"mynew:setting,omitempty"`
MyBoolSetting bool `json:"mynew:boolsetting,omitempty"`
MyNumberSetting float64 `json:"mynew:numbersetting,omitempty"`
MyIntSetting *int64 `json:"mynew:intsetting,omitempty"`
MyArraySetting []string `json:"mynew:arraysetting,omitempty"`
}
Naming Conventions:
- Use namespace prefixes (e.g.,
term:, window:, ai:, web:, app:)
- Use lowercase with colons as separators
- Field names should be descriptive and follow Go naming conventions
- Use
omitempty tag to exclude empty values from JSON
Type Guidelines:
- Use
*int64 and *float64 for optional numeric values
- Use
*bool for optional boolean values (or bool if default is false)
- Use
string for text values
- Use
[]string for arrays
- Use
float64 for numbers that can be decimals
Namespace Organization:
app:* - Application-level settings
term:* - Terminal-specific settings
window:* - Window and UI settings
ai:* - AI-related settings
web:* - Web browser settings
editor:* - Code editor settings
conn:* - Connection settings
Step 1.5: Add to Block Metadata (Optional)
If your setting should support block-level overrides, also add it to pkg/waveobj/wtypemeta.go:
type MetaTSType struct {
MyNewSetting *string `json:"mynew:setting,omitempty"`
MyBoolSetting *bool `json:"mynew:boolsetting,omitempty"`
MyNumberSetting *float64 `json:"mynew:numbersetting,omitempty"`
MyIntSetting *int `json:"mynew:intsetting,omitempty"`
MyArraySetting []string `json:"mynew:arraysetting,omitempty"`
}
Block Metadata Guidelines:
- Use pointer types (
*string, *bool, *int, *float64) for optional overrides
- JSON tags should exactly match the corresponding settings field
- This enables the hierarchical config system: block metadata → connection config → global settings
- Only add settings here that make sense to override per-block or per-connection
Step 2: Set Default Value (Optional)
If your setting should have a default value, add it to pkg/wconfig/defaultconfig/settings.json:
{
"ai:preset": "ai@global",
"ai:model": "gpt-5-mini",
"mynew:setting": "default value",
"mynew:boolsetting": true,
"mynew:numbersetting": 42.5,
"mynew:intsetting": 100
}
Default Value Guidelines:
- Only add defaults for settings that should have non-zero/non-empty initial values
- Ensure defaults make sense for typical user experience
- Keep defaults conservative and safe
- Boolean settings often don't need defaults if
false is the correct default
Step 3: Update Documentation
Add your new setting to the configuration table in docs/docs/config.mdx:
| Key Name | Type | Function |
| ------------------- | -------- | ----------------------------------------- |
| mynew:setting | string | Description of what this setting controls |
| mynew:boolsetting | bool | Enable/disable some feature |
| mynew:numbersetting | float | Numeric setting for some parameter |
| mynew:intsetting | int | Integer setting for some configuration |
| mynew:arraysetting | string[] | Array of strings for multiple values |
Documentation Guidelines:
- Provide clear, concise descriptions
- For new settings in upcoming releases, add
<VersionBadge version="v0.14" />
- Update the default configuration example if you added defaults
- Explain what values are valid and what they do
Step 4: Regenerate Schema and TypeScript Types
Run the generate task to automatically regenerate the JSON schema and TypeScript types:
task generate
What this does:
- Runs
task build:schema (automatically generates JSON schema from Go structs)
- Generates TypeScript type definitions in
frontend/types/gotypes.d.ts
- Generates RPC client APIs
- Generates metadata constants
Important: The JSON schema in schema/settings.json is automatically generated from the Go struct definitions - you don't need to edit it manually.
Step 5: Use in Frontend Code
Access your new setting in React components:
import { getOverrideConfigAtom, getSettingsKeyAtom, useAtomValue } from "@/store/global";
const MyComponent = ({ blockId }: { blockId: string }) => {
const mySettingAtom = getOverrideConfigAtom(blockId, "mynew:setting");
const mySetting = useAtomValue(mySettingAtom) ?? "fallback value";
const globalOnlySetting = useAtomValue(getSettingsKeyAtom("mynew:globalsetting")) ?? "fallback";
return <div>Setting value: {mySetting}</div>;
};
Frontend Configuration Patterns:
const termFontSize = useAtomValue(getOverrideConfigAtom(blockId, "term:fontsize")) ?? 12;
const appGlobalHotkey = useAtomValue(getSettingsKeyAtom("app:globalhotkey")) ?? "";
const connStatus = useAtomValue(getConnStatusAtom(connectionName));
When to use each pattern:
- Use
getOverrideConfigAtom() for settings that can vary by block or connection (most UI/display settings)
- Use
getSettingsKeyAtom() for app-level settings that are always global
- Always provide a fallback value with
?? operator
Step 6: Use in Backend Code
Access settings in Go code:
fullConfig := wconfig.GetWatcher().GetFullConfig()
myValue := fullConfig.Settings.MyNewSetting
if fullConfig.Settings.MyIntSetting != nil {
intValue := *fullConfig.Settings.MyIntSetting
}
Complete Examples
Example 1: Simple Boolean Setting (No Block Override)
Use case: Add a setting to hide the AI button globally
1. Go Struct (pkg/wconfig/settingsconfig.go)
type SettingsType struct {
AppHideAiButton bool `json:"app:hideaibutton,omitempty"`
}
2. Default Value (pkg/wconfig/defaultconfig/settings.json)
{
"app:hideaibutton": false
}
3. Documentation (docs/docs/config.mdx)
| app:hideaibutton <VersionBadge version="v0.14" /> | bool | Hide the AI button in the tab bar (defaults to false) |
4. Generate Types
task generate
5. Frontend Usage
import { getSettingsKeyAtom } from "@/store/global";
const TabBar = () => {
const hideAiButton = useAtomValue(getSettingsKeyAtom("app:hideaibutton"));
if (hideAiButton) {
return null;
}
return <button>AI</button>;
};
6. Usage Examples
wsh setconfig app:hideaibutton=true
{
"app:hideaibutton": true
}
Example 2: Terminal Setting with Block Override
Use case: Add a terminal bell sound setting that can be overridden per block
1. Go Struct (pkg/wconfig/settingsconfig.go)
type SettingsType struct {
TermBellSound string `json:"term:bellsound,omitempty"`
}
2. Block Metadata (pkg/waveobj/wtypemeta.go)
type MetaTSType struct {
TermBellSound *string `json:"term:bellsound,omitempty"`
}
3. Default Value (pkg/wconfig/defaultconfig/settings.json)
{
"term:bellsound": "default"
}
4. Documentation (docs/docs/config.mdx)
| term:bellsound <VersionBadge version="v0.14" /> | string | Sound to play for terminal bell ("default", "none", or custom sound file path) |
5. Generate Types
task generate
6. Frontend Usage
import { getOverrideConfigAtom } from "@/store/global";
const TerminalView = ({ blockId }: { blockId: string }) => {
const bellSoundAtom = getOverrideConfigAtom(blockId, "term:bellsound");
const bellSound = useAtomValue(bellSoundAtom) ?? "default";
const playBellSound = () => {
if (bellSound === "none") return;
};
return <div>Terminal with bell: {bellSound}</div>;
};
7. Usage Examples
wsh setconfig term:bellsound="custom.wav"
wsh setmeta term:bellsound="none"
wsh setmeta --block BLOCK_ID term:bellsound="beep"
{
"term:bellsound": "custom.wav"
}
Configuration Patterns
Clear/Reset Pattern
Each namespace can have a "clear" field for resetting all settings in that namespace:
AppClear bool `json:"app:*,omitempty"`
TermClear bool `json:"term:*,omitempty"`
Optional vs Required Settings
- Use pointer types (
*bool, *int64, *float64) for truly optional settings
- Use regular types for settings that should always have a value
- Provide sensible defaults for important settings
Block-Level Overrides via RPC
Settings can be overridden at the block level using metadata:
import { RpcApi } from "@/app/store/wshclientapi";
import { TabRpcClient } from "@/app/store/wshrpcutil";
import { WOS } from "@/store/global";
await RpcApi.SetMetaCommand(TabRpcClient, {
oref: WOS.makeORef("block", blockId),
meta: { "mynew:setting": "block-specific value" },
});
Common Pitfalls
1. Forgetting to Run task generate
Problem: TypeScript types not updated, schema out of sync
Solution: Always run task generate after modifying Go structs
2. Type Mismatch Between Settings and Metadata
Problem: Settings uses string, metadata uses *int
Solution: Ensure types match (except metadata uses pointers for optionals)
3. Not Providing Fallback Values
Problem: Component breaks if setting is undefined
Solution: Always use ?? operator with fallback:
const value = useAtomValue(getSettingsKeyAtom("key")) ?? "default";
4. Using Wrong Config Atom
Problem: Using getSettingsKeyAtom() for settings that need block overrides
Solution: Use getOverrideConfigAtom() for any setting in MetaTSType
Best Practices
Naming
- Use descriptive names:
term:fontsize not term:fs
- Follow namespace conventions: Group related settings with common prefix
- Use consistent casing: Always lowercase with colons
Types
- Use
bool for simple on/off settings (no pointer if false is default)
- Use
*bool only if you need to distinguish unset from false
- Use
*int64/*float64 for optional numeric values
- Use
string for text, paths, or enum-like values
- Use
[]string for lists
Defaults
- Provide sensible defaults for settings users will commonly change
- Omit defaults for advanced/optional settings
- Keep defaults safe - don't enable experimental features by default
- Document defaults clearly in config.mdx
Block Overrides
- Enable for view/display settings: Font sizes, colors, themes, etc.
- Don't enable for app-wide settings: Global hotkeys, window behavior, etc.
- Consider the use case: Would a user want different values per block or connection?
Documentation
- Be specific: Explain what the setting does and what values are valid
- Provide examples: Show common use cases
- Add version badges: Mark new settings with
<VersionBadge version="v0.x" />
- Keep it current: Update docs when behavior changes
Quick Reference
When adding a new configuration setting:
Related Documentation
- User Documentation:
docs/docs/config.mdx - User-facing configuration docs
- Type Definitions:
pkg/wconfig/settingsconfig.go - Go struct definitions
- Metadata Types:
pkg/waveobj/wtypemeta.go - Block metadata definitions