Previously weston_config_section_get_uint was serving dual purpose for
parsing both unsigned decimal integer values (ids, counts, seconds,
etc.) and hexadecimal values (colors), by relying on strtoul's
auto-detection mechanism.
However, this usage is unable to catch certain kinds of error
conditions, such as specifying a negative number where an unsigned
should be used. And for colors in particular, it would misparse hex
values if the leading 0x was omitted. E.g. "background-color=99999999"
would render a near-black background (effectively 0x05f5e0ff) instead of
medium grey, and "background-color=ffffffff" would be treated as an
error rather than white. "background-color=0x01234567",
"background-color=01234567", and "background-color=1234567" each
resulted in the value being parsed as hexadecimal, octal, and decimal
respectively, resulting in colors 0x01234567, 0x00053977, and 0x0012d687
being displayed.
This new routine forces hexadecimal to be used in all cases when parsing
color values, so "0x01234567" and "01234567" result in the same color
value, "99999999" is grey, and "ffffffff" is white. It also requires
exactly 8 or 10 digits (other lengths likely indicate typos), or the
value "0" (black).
Signed-off-by: Bryce Harrington <bryce@osg.samsung.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Engestrom <eric.engestrom@imgtec.com>
We have the Weston command line option '--no-config' which is meant to
prevent loading weston.ini at all. It works for Weston itself, but it
does not work for any clients that also want to read weston.ini.
To fix that, introduce a new environment variable WESTON_CONFIG_FILE.
Weston will set it to the absolute path of the config file it loads.
Clients will load the config file pointed to by WESTON_CONFIG_FILE. If
the environment variable is set but empty, no config file will be
loaded. If the variable is unset, things fall back to the default
"weston.ini".
Note, that Weston will only set WESTON_CONFIG_FILE, it never reads it.
The ability to specify a custom config file to load will be another patch.
All programs that loaded "weston.ini" are modified to honour
WESTON_CONFIG_FILE.
Signed-off-by: Pekka Paalanen <pekka.paalanen@collabora.co.uk>
Reviewed-by: Jonny Lamb <jonny.lamb@collabora.co.uk>
Reviewed-by: Nobuhiko Tanibata <NOBUHIKO_TANIBATA@xddp.denso.co.jp>
Reviewed-by: Bryce Harrington <bryce@osg.samsung.com>
desktop shell and weston keyboard both refer to themselves prefixed by
LIBEXECDIR, however this is only valid once installed. make check will
currently either fail or run pre-existing versions.
This patch adds a way to override that location by setting the env var
WESTON_BUILD_DIR - which is then set by the test env script so make check
will test the versions in the build directory regardless of whether they're
installed or not.
Reviewed-by: Pekka Paalanen <pekka.paalanen@collabora.co.uk>
This patch adds 3 new options to weston.ini to allow
the user to change default constant_accel_factor,
min_accel_factor and max_accel_factor. If no options
are set, it falls back using defaults as it did before.
v2: create weston_config_section_get_double and use it
instead of manualy converting string to double.
v3: add default values in weston_config_get_double
instead of using conditionals.
v4: don't pass diagonal as pointer.
The current config parser, parses the ini file and pulls out the values
specified by the struct config_section passed to parse_config_file() and
then throw the rest away. This means that every place we want to get
info out of the ini file, we have to parse the whole thing again. It's not
a big overhead, but it's also not a convenient API.
This patch adds a parser that parses the ini file to a data structure and
puts that in weston_compositor->config along with API to query comfig
keys from the data structure. The old parser is still available, but
we'll transition to the new approach over the next few commits.
This set of changes adds support for searching for a given config file
in the directories listed in $XDG_CONFIG_DIRS if it wasn't found in
$XDG_CONFIG_HOME or ~/.config. This allows packages to install custom
config files in /etc/xdg/weston, for example, thus allowing them to
avoid dealing with home directories.
To avoid a TOCTOU race the config file is actually open()ed during the
search. Its file descriptor is returned and stored in the compositor
for later use when performing subsequent config file parses.
Signed-off-by: Ossama Othman <ossama.othman@intel.com>
We were pulling in cairo and the image loading libraries through libshared.
Split out libshared into a core libshared and a libshared-cairo that
pulls in the extra libraries.
On one hand, getopt (in particular the -o suboption syntax) sucks on the
server side, and on the client side we would like to avoid the glib
dependency. We can roll out own option parser and solve both problems
and save a few lines of code total.
Eventually we will want more functionality in the shared library and we
will rename it at that point. Perhaps we'll name it libnih, but for now
let's stick with libconfig-parser.