to debug bug reports occuring only with certain setups wrap the function
call with a logging edition so we have the arguments available in the
log for debugging.
* Prefer xinput events over x11 events for mouse input
* Prefer xinput raw events over xinput events:
* Only use when the mouse is grabbed (events are not bound to a
specific window but are global)
* Only use for relative mouse input
When leaving fullscreen with enabled smart sizing the window size
did shrink due to first resizing the window, then enabling window
decorations and finally moving to the correct position.
Covscan report contains various memory leak defects which were marked
as important. I have spent some time analyzing them and although they
were marked as important, most of them are in error cases, so probably
nothing serious. Let's fix most of them anyway. The rest are false
positives, or too complicated to fix, or already fixed in master, or
simply I am unsure about them.
Relates: https://github.com/FreeRDP/FreeRDP/issues/6981
The cause is very simple: we didn't map the xwindow on receiving
WINDOW_SHOW. but doing that causes another problem that you can't
hide a window anymore, and that is because whlie window hiding, the
_NET_WM_STATE and WM_STATE properies of the xwindow may change, in
the function `xf_event_PropertyNotify` we just assume that windows
not maximized, not minimized, yet not showing normally should be
corrected to be shown, we just need to consider the situation that
the window is hidden here.
fix: #5078
Icons on X11 windows are configured using the _NET_WM_ICON property
described in Extended Window Manager Hints. Here we implement converison
from DIB bitmaps used by RAIL to the format expected by _NET_WM_ICON,
and actually set the icon for RAIL app windows.
Both DIB format and _NET_WM_ICON (or rather, Xlib) are weird. Let's
start with RAIL's format. That's the one used in BMP and ICO formats
on Windows. It has some strange properties but thankfully FreeRDP's
freerdp_image_copy() can handle most of them for us. (With an exception
of monochrome and 16-color formats that it does not support. Sorry, but
I'm too lazy to fix them. They are not seem to be used by any real
application either.) The one thing that it can't do is to apply the
alpha transparency bitmask so we have to do it manually. This instantly
reminds us that DIB format has HISTORY: it's vertically flipped and
each must be padded to 4 bytes. Both these quirks having reasonable
(for a certain definition of 'reason') explanations. Such is life.
(Also, 8-bit images require a color palette which we must fill in.)
So okay, now comes _NET_WM_ICON. It is more sane (or rather, easier to
deal with). The bitmap is represented with a tiny [width, height] header
followed by an array of pixels in ARGB format. There is no padding, no
weird color formats. But here's a catch: you can't simply take the
output of freerdp_image_copy() and cast to (unsigned char*) of colors.
We have to allocate an array of C's longs and copy the pixels there,
because that's what Xlib expects (and this is mentioned in the spec).
Simply casting an array of bytes causes crashes on 64-bit systems.
So don't try to cheat or "optimize" and read the docs, kids.
Note that XFlush() call after XChangeProperty(). It's there because it
seems to helps see the icon quicker with Unity on Ubuntu 14.04. I don't
know why. (And Unity does not support _NET_WM_ICON officially. But it
sorta kinda works sometimes.)
Oh, and while we're here, delete some old, unused, and commented out
code that was setting window icons in the past. It's not needed anymore.
1. Fix fullscreen toggle for window managers that do not have multimonitor fullscreen extension support
2. Fix current monitor detection
3. Fix calculation of vscreen boundaries when single monitor is being used
4. Fix start up position of window when starting (used to always go to the top left corener, now centered)
Still a problem:
1. Window decorations do not show when going windowed
2. Smart resizing makes i3 really sad :(
3. Moving window across monitors and going fullscreen always maximizes on startup screen (when not using /multimon)