Currently, there is a fun flicker when toggling maximization or
fullscreen on a window in mutter or more sophisicated compositors
and WMs.
What happens is that the client want so go maximized, so we
calculate the size that we want the window to resize to (640x480),
and then add on its margins to find the buffer size (+10 = 660x500),
and then send out a configure event for that size. The client
renders to that size, realizes that it's maximized, and then
says "oh hey, my margins are actually 0 now!", and so the compositor
has to send out another configure event.
In order to fix this, make the the configure request correspond to
the window geometry we'd like the window to be at. At the same time,
replace set_margin with set_window_geometry, where we specify a rect
rather than a border around the window.
Once we've updated the window state and scheduled a resize, we know that
the next frame we send to the compositor will match the configured state.
This means we can just ack the configure immediately and not jump
through hoops to try to do it from the redraw stage.
As the protocol says, the states determine how the width and height
arguments should be interpreted, so it makes logical sense to do the
interpretation after.
Add a new state_changed_handler callback to the window to know when the
window has changed state; the terminal will use this to know when the
window started and ended its resize operation, and modify the terminal's
titlebar accordingly.
Currently, there's a race condition. When resizing from the left, and
a client attaches a buffer after the resize ends, you suddenly see the
buffer jump to the right, because the resize ended while multiple
attaches were in-flight. Making resize a state can fix this, as the
server can now know exactly when the resize ended, and whether a commit
was before or after that place.
We don't implement the correct tracking in this commit; that's left as
an exercise to the reader.
Additionally, clients like terminals might want to display resize popups
to display the number of cells when in a resize. They can use the hint
here to figure out whether they are resizing.
The states system, so far, has been a complicated mix of weird APIs
that solved a real race condition, but have been particularly ugly
for both compositors and clients to implement.
It's a confusing name that comes from the ICCCM. The ICCCM is best
forgotten about.
With the addition of the potential new "transient" role meaning a
parent-relative toplevel like a long-lived popup, used for e.g.
tooltips, the set_transient_for name will become even more confusing.
Toytoolkit was not designed to handle input from subsurfaces and
instead it expects subsurfaces to have an empty input region. That way
input events for subsurfaces are generated on the main surface and
there is no need to convert coordinates before reporting the event to
the user.
However it is possible that a subsurface has a non-empty input region,
but in that case those events aren't properly processed. The function
window_find_widget() assumes the coordinates are in the main surface
coordinate space, and ends up chosing the wrong widget.
This patch changes the input code to completely ignore input events from
subsurfaces. This option was chosen instead of ensuring that the input
region on those surfaces is always empty since there's no enforcement
that a subsurface should completely overlap with the main surface. If
an event happens in the area of the surface that doesn't overlap, the
event could cause a completely unrelated surface to be picked.
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=78207
Ideally, we'll update the key event handling to deliver events to widgets,
but in the meantime, just blocking key event delivery while a grab is
active goes a long way.
It looks like the handler for frame events from the wl_touch interface for
widgets may have been erroneously copied from the cancel handler so that it
removes all handlers as they are processed. I don't think this makes much sense
for the frame event. This was stopping the panel icons from being pushable with
touch events when using libinput since commit 1679f232e5. All that commit
does it make it start sending the frame events.
When adding a subsurface (to display a tooltip) in toytoolkit,
we now get the parent window surface type (SHM or EGL) and
define the new surface type as the same.
This fixes crashes with tooltips in cases like having
Cairo-EGL available but running the X11 compositor.
Signed-off-by: Manuel Bachmann <manuel.bachmann@open.eurogiciel.org>
Reviewed-by: Jason Ekstrand <jason@jlekstrand.net>
Rather than require that the client implement two methods for every state,
simply have one global request, change_state, and one global event,
request_change_state.
Clients that need to be redrawn when the focus changes do that by
listening to focus_changed and scheduling a redraw.
This was causing unnecessary redraws in the clients, as could be
easily seen by changing focus on weston-flower.
Signed-off-by: Emilio Pozuelo Monfort <emilio.pozuelo@collabora.co.uk>
Use a static assert to catch mismatch between implementation and
interface version. Fix window.c to not use XDG_SHELL_VERSION_CURRENT,
which will fail to catch version mismatches. The implementation version
must updated manually when the implementation is updated to use the new
interface.
Responsivenes is a per-client thing so we move the ping/pong functionality
to xdg_shell. Having this per-window was carries over from the EWMH
protocol, where the WM has no other way to do this. In wayland, the
compositor can directly ping the client that owns the surface.
This is used to figure out the size of "invisible" decorations, which we'll
use to better know the visible extents of the surface, which we can use for
constraining, titlebars, and more.
This is equivalent to WM_DELETE_WINDOW request under X11, or equivalent
to pressing the "close" button under CSD. Weston currently doesn't have
a compositor-side way to close the window, so no new code is needed on
its side.
When we set the fullscreen flag, we have to wait for the corresponding
configure event and then attach a buffer of that size to indicate
that we've successfully gone fullscreen/maximized.
Without this patch, we can schedule a redraw and go through with it after
setting maximize/fullscreen and end up attaching a buffer of the wrong size.
In practice, what happens is that pressing the maximize button triggers
setting maximized, but also triggers a redraw to paint the maxmize button.
Without this change, repainting the button triggers a repaint that attaches
the same size buffer immediately.
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=71927
xdg_shell changes this around so that they are flags on the remote
object itself, not separate surface types. Move to a system where
we calculate the state from the flags ourselves and set the appropriate
wl_shell_surface type.
When we port to xdg_shell, we'll drop these flags and simply sync
on the client.
Transient windows, at least not as they are today, don't exist in
xdg_shell. Subsurfaces allow for specially placed surfaces relative
to a window, so use these instead.
The input region of the cursor surface is set to empty in
pointer_cursor_surface_configure(). Since during the commit process
this function is called before the pending input region is made
current, it empties surface->pending.input instead of surface->input.
But pointer_cursor_surface_configure() is also called from
pointer_set_cursor() in order to map the cursor even if there isn't a
subsequent attach and commit to the cursor surface. In that case,
surface->input is never emptied, since the configure function emptied
only the pending input region and there wasn't a commit that made it
effective.
Fix this by emptying both pending and current input regions. The latter
shouldn't cause problems since the surface can't have a role prior to
being assigned the cursor role, so it shouldn't be mapped in the first
place.
Also change toytoolkit so that it triggers the bug.
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=73711
If we destroy a window with an active tooltip, we leave the tooltip
hanging around. Call tooltip destructor when destroying a window.
This fixes the stuck tooltip observed when unplugging a monitor with
an active tooltip on the panel.
Closes: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=72931
The subsurfaces example creates a subsurface widget and uses EGL to
render to it directly rather than using the cairo context from the
widget. In theory this shouldn't cause any problems because the westoy
window code lazily creates the cairo surface when an application
creates a cairo context. However commit fdca95c7 changed the behaviour
to force the lazy creation at the beginning of each surface redraw.
This ends up making the triangle surface get two attaches – one from
Cairo and one from the direct EGL.
It looks like it would be difficult to reinstate the lazy surface
creation behaviour whilst still maintaining the error handling for
surface creation because none of the redraw handlers in the example
clients are designed to cope with that. Instead, this patch adds an
explicit option on a widget to disable creating the Cairo surface and
the subsurface example now uses that.
Closes: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=72854
It is quite possible for os_create_anonymous_file() to fail when trying
to allocate a new wl_shm buffer. Propagate this failure out from
shm_surface_prepare. Most parts of toytoolkit are already avoiding NULL
cairo surfaces.
If cairo surface allocation fails, do not try to call the widget redraw
functions, those are not prepared to deal with NULL. Also do not
schedule a frame callback, this allows us to retry drawing the next
time.
If redraw fails for the main_surface of a window, restore the widget
geometry to what the compositor currently is showing. This keeps the
window visual appearance in sync with application state, so interacting
with the application does not break too badly.
If the very first draw of any window fails, then forcefully exit the
program. E.g. if weston-desktop-shell fails to allocate buffers for the
unlock dialog, w-d-s exits, and weston unlocks the screen automatically.
This patch allows e.g. weston-terminal to stop from enlarging while
resizing, if new sized buffers can no longer the allocated. Even then,
the application stays usable, as it can often repaint in the last
successful size. It does not crash, and the user is able to resize it
smaller, too.
Signed-off-by: Pekka Paalanen <pekka.paalanen@collabora.co.uk>
Data device interface in client just handle with pointer's dnd.
If a touch screen trigger dnd, it will use pointer struct like i
nput->sx, input->sy, input->pointer_focus. So if pointer is moving
when touch screen trigeer a dnd, wrong behaviore will occur.
Before touch screen start dnd, system call touch_grab()
to mark the following drag and drop operation is generated by
touch screen.
Defined some common variables in struct input to track dnd.
Note, touch screen and pointer can't generate drag and drop at the
same time, becuae data device protocol can't identify the drag
and drop event is generated by touch screen or pointer.
Signed-off-by: Xiong Zhang <xiong.y.zhang@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kristian Hogsberg <hoegsberg@gmail.com>
Adding the interface for touch screen event in clients/dnd.c, once
user touch down on this app, it will trigger a touch and drag
operation.
Signed-off-by: Xiong Zhang <xiong.y.zhang@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Kristian Hogsberg <hoegsberg@gmail.com>
It seems that this was only used by the popup menu infrastructure,
which can handle this all on its own. Implementing e.g. transients
in the future can be done with a simple xdg_shell_set_transient_for.
We used to ungrab first to stop any existing grab and then grab after
showing the menu. That was broken in c680e90489, which
moved the ungrab down below the grab, and as a result menus are now
shown without a grab. This commit moves the grab back up.
when output is removed, weston-desktop-shell should destroy panel
and background surface on destroyed output.
Signed-off-by: Xiong Zhang <xiong.y.zhang@intel.com>
The decorations tiles start to overlap and look weird if we go below
200x200 size windows. Just set that as a minimum size if the app
doesn't provide a bigger minimum size.
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=66794
cairo_egl_device_create(), which is called next,
already checks if EGL_KHR_surfaceless_context is
available. If not, it fallbacks to pbuffer.
Signed-off-by: Adrian Negreanu <adrian.m.negreanu@intel.com>
And check if the renderer supports the RGB565 format for wl_shm buffers
before creating the cairo surface and requesting the buffer.
It can save quite some memory with big surfaces such as desktop
backgrounds.
For the sample clients we introduce xmalloc() to simplify OOM-handling.
This patch only converts a few callsites, but this will be our strategy
going forward.
It is possible to receive a motion event that was generated by the
compositor based on a pick of a surface of old dimensions. This was
triggerable on toytoolkit clients when minimising. The new window
dimensions were propagated through the widget hierarchy before the event
was dispatched.
This issue was triggering a segfault due to the focussed widget being
lost as the client code tried to identify which widget should have the
focus using co-ordinates outside the dimensions of the surface.
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=66795
Originally window.c was requesting version 1 but several clients were
calling version 2 and 3 events including the desktop shell itself.
Signed-off-by: Jason Ekstrand <jason@jlekstrand.net>
In preparation for upcoming changes, we want to make sure that apps
written with the toy toolkit continue to operate properly if no XKB
keymap is received. If there's no XKB keymap, then we shouldn't
try to figure out keyboard modifier states (since we probably don't
even have equivalents of PC-style modifiers).
Reviewed-by: Singh, Satyeshwar <satyeshwar.singh@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Bob Paauwe <bob.j.paauwe@intel.com>
AC_USE_SYSTEM_EXTENSIONS enables _XOPEN_SOURCE, _GNU_SOURCE and similar
macros to expose the largest extent of functionality supported by the
underlying system. This is required since these macros are often
limiting rather than merely additive, e.g. _XOPEN_SOURCE will actually
on some systems hide declarations which are not part of the X/Open spec.
Since this goes into config.h rather than the command line, ensure all
source is consistently including config.h before anything else,
including system libraries. This doesn't need to be guarded by a
HAVE_CONFIG_H ifdef, which was only ever a hangover from the X.Org
modular transition.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Stone <daniel@fooishbar.org>
[pq: rebased and converted more files]
A wayland compositor doesn't provide a mechanism for buffer sharing between
clients. Under X, one client can render to a Pixmap and another can use it
as a source in a subsequent drawing operations. Wayland doesn't have a
mechanims to share Pixmaps or textures between clients like that, but it's
possible for one client to act as a nested compositor to another client.
This less work than it sounds, since the nested compositor won't have to
provide input devices or even any kind of shell extension. The nested
compositor and its client can be very tightly coupled and have very specific
expectations of what the other process should provide.
In this example, nested.c is a toytoolkit application that uses cairo-gl
for rendering and forks and execs nested-client.c. As it execs the client,
it passes it one end of a socketpair that will be the clients connection
to the nested compositor. The nested compositor doesn't even create a
listening socket.
The client is a minimal GLES2 application, which just renders a spinning
triangle in its frame callback.
Whether or not a shm pool is used for resizing is now configurable at
build time (--disable-resize-optimization).
[pq: removed an unnecessary hunk from the patch]
We used to just store the buffer size here which is not right if the
surface has a buffer_transform or a buffer_scale. To fix this we pass
the transform and scale into the toysurface prepare and swap calls and
move both the surface to buffer and the buffer to surface size
conversion there.
Without this interactive resize on the top or left sides of a transformed
or scaled surface will not work correctly.
Apparently some compilers complain about set but not used variables
'available' and 'bufs', but I don't get the warning. Still, separate the
debugging code from shm_surface_buffer_release(), so that we only
compute 'bufs' when it is printed. This should fix the warnings.
The debugging code now prints the shm_surface buffer state before and
after, instead of just after.
Signed-off-by: Pekka Paalanen <pekka.paalanen@collabora.co.uk>
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>
In case a toytoolkit application manages to schedule resizes constantly,
throttle them to the main surface display.
When resizing, all surfaces are updated synchronously, so it also makes
sense to synchronize on the main surface's frame callback particularly.
Rendering any faster will not make sense.
Signed-off-by: Pekka Paalanen <ppaalanen@gmail.com>
Mesa's eglSwapBuffers() waits for the frame event from the previous
swapBuffers, before it returns. Apparently eglSwapInterval(), which
should be able to disable the wait, is unimplemented for now.
When a sub-surface contains an EGL widget, and the commit mode is
synchronized, the frame events will not be delivered to EGL until the
parent surface gets committed. Therefore rendering the EGL widget twice
would lead to a deadlock.
When the window is being resized, we need to force a repaint of the EGL
widget, too, to make the whole window consistent. For that, we need to
make sure the frame event from the previous eglSwapBuffers() actually
arrives.
This patch adds an extra wl_surface.commit(parent), when the window is
being resized, which should guarantee, that the previous eglSwapBuffers
gets its event.
To properly handle an EGL widget in a sub-surface, running in its own
thread, the EGL widget's automatic updates should be paused before
sending the extra wl_surface.commit(parent). A natural place for the
pause would be in the widget's resize hook. However, wl_surface.commit
cannot be called right after resize hooks, because it would commit new,
incomplete surface state. Therefore this patch is not enough for
threaded toytoolkit applications. Luckily those do not exist yet.
When eglSwapInterval() gets implemented, this patch should be reverted.
Signed-off-by: Pekka Paalanen <ppaalanen@gmail.com>
Add a demo program with:
- a main surface (green)
- a Cairo-image sub-surface (red)
- a raw GLESv2 widget (triangle)
Sub-surface input region is set empty to avoid problems in toytoolkit.
If Cairo links to libGL, then we will end up with also libGLESv2 linked
to subsurfaces program, and both libs getting really used, which leads
to disaster.
Do not build subsurfaces demo, if Cairo links to libGL and cairo-egl is
usable.
The GL rendering loop is not tied to the toytoolkit or the widget, but
runs directly from its own frame callback. Therefore it runs
independent of the rest of the application. This also relies on one of
two things:
- eglSwapInterval(0) is implemented, and therefore eglSwapBuffers never
blocks indefinitely, or
- toytoolkit has a workaround, that guarantees that eglSwapBuffers will
return soon, when we force a repaint on resize.
Otherwise the demo will deadlock.
The code is separated into three sections:
1. The library component, using only EGL, GLESv2, and libwayland-client
APIs, and not aware of any toolkit details of the parent application.
This runs independently until the parent application tells otherwise.
2. The glue code: a toytoolkit application widget, who has its own
rendering machinery.
3. The application written in toytoolkit.
This patch also adds new toytoolkit interfaces:
- widget_get_wl_surface()
- widget_get_last_time()
- widget_input_region_add()
Toytoolkit applications have not had a possibility to change the input
region. The frame widget (decorations) set the input region on its own
when used, otherwise the default input region of everything has been
used. If a window does not have a frame widget, it can now use
widget_input_region_add() to set a custom input region.
These are not window methods, because a widget may lie on a different
wl_surface (sub-surface) than the window.
Changes in v3:
- replace set_commit_mode with set_sync and set_desync
Signed-off-by: Pekka Paalanen <ppaalanen@gmail.com>
Add redraw_needed flag to all surfaces, in addition to having one in
window. The window redraw_needed flag is changed to force a redraw of
the whole window, regardless of frame events.
widget_schedule_redraw() now schedules the redraw only for the surface,
where the widget is on. window_schedule_redraw() is equivalent to
scheduling a redraw for all (sub-)surfaces of the window.
We still use only one deferred task for all redraws.
surface_redraw() will skip the redraw, if the window does not force a
redraw and the surface does not need a redraw. It will also skip the
redraw, if the frame callback from the previous redraw has not triggered
yet. When the frame callback later arrives, the redraw task will be
scheduled, if the surface still needs a redraw.
If the window forces a redraw, the redraw is executed even if there is a
pending frame callback. This is for resizing: resizing should trigger a
window repaint, as it really wants to update all surfaces in one go, to
apply possible sub-surface size and position changes. Resizing is the
only thing that makes a window force a redraw.
With this change, subsurfaces demo can avoid repainting the cairo
sub-surface while still animating the GL sub-surface.
Signed-off-by: Pekka Paalanen <ppaalanen@gmail.com>
The new application API window_add_subsurface() will create a plain
widget that is on a new sub-surface.
The sub-surface position is taken from the surface's root widget
allocation. This way widget allocations are always in the main surface
(i.e. window) coordinates. However, Cairo drawing coordinates will now
be different to widget coordinates for sub-surfaces. Cairo coordinates
are fixed by applying a translation in widget_cairo_create(), so that
widget drawing code can simply use the widget allocation as before.
Sub-surfaces are hooked up into resize, window flush, redraw, and
find_widget. Window maintains a list of sub-surfaces in top-first order.
Add a client settable default commit mode, and toggle the mode when
resizing to guarantee in-sync updates of a window and its sub-surfaces.
Changes in v3:
- replaced set_commit_mode with set_sync and set_desync
Signed-off-by: Pekka Paalanen <ppaalanen@gmail.com>
Increase the maximum number of shm "leaves" to three, and rewrite the
leaf release and pick algorithms. The new algorithms hopefully improve
on buffer re-use while freeing unused buffers.
The goal of the new release algorithm is to always leave one free leaf
with storage allocated, so that the next redraw could start straight on
it.
The new leaf picking algorithm will prefer a free leaf that already has
some storage allocated, instead of just picking the first free leaf that
may need to allocate a new buffer.
Triple-buffering is especially for sub-surfaces, where the compositor
may have one wl_buffer busy on screen, and another wl_buffer busy in the
sub-surface cached state due to the synchronized commit mode. To be
able to forcibly repaint at that situation for e.g. resize, we need a
third buffer.
Signed-off-by: Pekka Paalanen <ppaalanen@gmail.com>
Resolve a bad frame visible when maximizing toytoolkit programs with the the
maximize button in decorations. Windows now use wl_display.sync requests to
wait for a maximize to finish before drawing again, following suggestions from
http://lists.freedesktop.org/archives/wayland-devel/2013-February/007650.html
Make sure that display_acquire_window_surface() creates the Cairo
surface as necessary. Otherwise surface->toysurface can be NULL.
This fixes weston-screensaver fullscreen mode. Demo mode was not
affected as it uses window decorations, and so the Cairo surface is
created. This regression was introduced by:
commit 0c4445ba57
Author: Pekka Paalanen <ppaalanen@gmail.com>
Date: Wed Feb 13 16:17:23 2013 +0200
window: create Cairo surfaces on demand for redraw
Reported-by: Ander Conselvan de Oliveira <ander.conselvan.de.oliveira@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Pekka Paalanen <ppaalanen@gmail.com>
Ideally the shell would send an unmaximize event to the client when
we try to move a maximized window, but for now, let's just prevent
moving maximized windows.
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=56296
This introduces the function widget_cairo_create().
Instead of directly referencing surface->cairo_surface, use the function
widget_cairo_create(), which will create the cairo_surface as necessary,
and just returns a Cairo drawing context. Also fix window_get_surface()
similarly.
Now we can go through idle_redraw() without always creating Cairo
surfaces and committing them. This will be useful with sub-surfaces,
where repainting one sub-surface does not need to force the repaint of
all surfaces of a window.
Signed-off-by: Pekka Paalanen <ppaalanen@gmail.com>
Menu and tooltip redraw functions were using the surface size directly.
For consistency, make them use the widget size instead, it is the same.
Signed-off-by: Pekka Paalanen <ppaalanen@gmail.com>
Widgets should be rendering to a cairo_surface for a particular
wl_surface, just like buffers are per surface.
window_flush() has a change in behaviour: it will now send
wl_shell_surface.set_toplevel also without a cairo_surface to be
attached. This shouldn't change anything in practice.
Signed-off-by: Pekka Paalanen <ppaalanen@gmail.com>
So that given a widget, we can access the surface specific data, like
buffers, and input and opaque regions.
Signed-off-by: Pekka Paalanen <ppaalanen@gmail.com>
They are per wl_surface state.
The frame widget is always on the main surface, since it can be created
only for the window. That is why frame_resize_handler() can simply
assume that the surface is the main_surface.
Signed-off-by: Pekka Paalanen <ppaalanen@gmail.com>
Repaint and resizing widget recursions must start from the root widget
of each (sub-)surface, so that buffers and regions get initialized
correctly. Make it easier by moving the widget field from struct window
to struct surface.
Signed-off-by: Pekka Paalanen <ppaalanen@gmail.com>
These are surface specifics, since buffers are surface specific.
SURFACE_HINT_RESIZE is moved together to the other SURFACE_* flags, so
that surface_create_surface() would not need two flags arguments.
struct toysurface::prepare vfunc checks for SURFACE_HINT_RESIZE, and
egl_window_surface_create() and shm_surface_create() check for the
non-HINT flags.
Signed-off-by: Pekka Paalanen <ppaalanen@gmail.com>
Fields 'allocation' and 'server_allocation' are surface specific. Fields
'saved_allocation', 'min_allocation', and 'pending_allocation' are
window specific, and will not be moved.
Field 'toysurface' is naturally surface specific, since it provides the
backing storage for the wl_surface.
Signed-off-by: Pekka Paalanen <ppaalanen@gmail.com>
Struct window has many fields that are directly related to the
wl_surface, more than to the window as a whole. When we start composing
a window from several wl_surfaces, these fields need to be per
wl_surface, not per window.
Start separating such fields from struct window into struct surface by
moving the wl_surface.
Signed-off-by: Pekka Paalanen <ppaalanen@gmail.com>
Handle the case when we the compositor somehow migrates from requiring
double buffering into working on single buffering, so we release the
extra shm buffer.
Currently, I do not think this can happen in practice, but in the future
it may happen with sub-surfaces.
Signed-off-by: Pekka Paalanen <ppaalanen@gmail.com>
Check for errors in the first wl_display_dispatch() call. Otherwise
doing something silly like
$ WAYLAND_SOCKET=999 ./clickdot
will segfault.
Signed-off-by: Pekka Paalanen <ppaalanen@gmail.com>
Make them explicitly mention EGL, otherwise one can easily think that
"failed to initialize display" refers to Wayland display.
Also explicitly mention falling back to wl_shm. I tested this with a
LD_PRELOAD trick that overrides eglBindAPI and makes it fail.
Signed-off-by: Pekka Paalanen <ppaalanen@gmail.com>
All the clients here were missing the global_remove handler. Because
window.c did not have it, weston-desktop-shell and weston-keyboard
segfaulted on compositor exit, as they received some
wl_registry.global_remove events.
Add more or less stub global_remove handlers, so that clients do not
crash on such events. Toytoolkit and all applications would need a lot
more code to properly handle the global object removal.
Signed-off-by: Pekka Paalanen <ppaalanen@gmail.com>