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>
After a client has been double-buffering, and then switches to
single-buffering, it should release the 2nd buffer. That never happens
in practice here, so just add a comment and a check in case it ever
occurs in the future.
If we implemented the releasing now, it would be difficult to test.
Signed-off-by: Pekka Paalanen <ppaalanen@gmail.com>
In a few cases, we set a motion handler just to be able to set a fixed
cursor. This adds a default cursor helper that can be used in those cases.
In case of the 'transformed' test case, we also avoid a brief flicker
of the pointer cursor, which is set on enter when the move grab is lifted.
Change the boolean parameter 'resize_hint' into a bitmask 'flags'.
Note, that this flags is very different to the other flags used in
creating the toysurface implementations. They do not make sense to mix
one way or the other. Prepare() cannot change the surface type, and
surface constructors do not care for dynamic hint flags.
Signed-off-by: Pekka Paalanen <ppaalanen@gmail.com>
When a window's buffer transformation is set, its buffers are
reallocated with the appropriate size (i.e., with width and height
swapped in case of 90 or 270 degree rotation).
Since the opaque region was set in frame_resize_handler(), if a client
created a frameless window setting the toplevel widget as opaque would
have no effect.
This patch fixes this by moving the call wl_surface_set_opaque_region()
to idle_resize(), and changing the latter function to set the whole
window as opaque if its toplevel widget has the opaque flag set.
To reproduce, launch the terminal, open a second window using Ctrl-Shift-N,
go back to the first window, and press Ctrl-D. The terminal's master FD gets
events even after being closed, causing terminal_destroy to be called twice
on the same object.
To fix this, I'm adding a function to stop watching an FD.
Listen for wl_buffer.release events in the shm path, and if a previously
posted buffer is still held by the server, allocate another one. The
maximum of two should be enough, since there is no point for a server to
hold more than one buffer at a time.
Buffer allocation happens as needed instead of window creation time.
Signed-off-by: Pekka Paalanen <ppaalanen@gmail.com>
After the toysurface rewrite, windows do not have a valid Cairo surface
outside their repaint cycle, so tooltips are not getting their size
right.
Create a dummy Cairo surface only for querying text extents, so we do
not rely on any window surfaces of parent windows or otherwise.
Signed-off-by: Pekka Paalanen <ppaalanen@gmail.com>
Implement shm_surface as a sub-class of toysurface, and unify the
toysurface call sites removing most buffer type specific branching.
Do not destroy and create a surface, if the size does not change.
The resizing optimization of shm surfaces is retained, but the pool is
moved from struct window to struct shm_surface, since it does not apply
to egl_window_surface.
Signed-off-by: Pekka Paalanen <ppaalanen@gmail.com>
We need more structure to the way we handle the backing storage in
toytoolkit, to make it possible to double-buffer the shm case properly.
The existing buffer handling is very complex with the three
different cases:
- EGLSurface backed Cairo surface with a window associated
- wl_shm backed Cairo surface with a window associated
- wl_shm backed Cairo surface without a window, as used by dnd.c
Introduce the toysurface abstraction, which defines the interface for
the both buffer handling cases that have a window associated. It also
means, that windows will not have a valid Cairo surface outside of their
repaint cycle.
Convert the EGLsurface case into toysurface for starters. For EGL-based
Cairo surfaces, the private data is no longer needed. Destroying
egl_window_surface will trigger the destruction of the cairo_surface_t,
not vice versa. This is possible because display_create_surface() is
shm-only.
The shm cases are left untouched.
As a side-effect, display_acquire_window_surface() and
display_release_window_surface() will no longer use the 'display'
argument. Instead, display will be the one inherited from the window.
Signed-off-by: Pekka Paalanen <ppaalanen@gmail.com>
Send state and modifier from the demo keyboard with the keysym event and
take them into account in the editor example.
Add some helper functions to write and read a modifiers_map array.
Signed-off-by: Jan Arne Petersen <jpetersen@openismus.com>
Nothing uses it to create EGL-surfaces outside of window.c. This makes
refactoring the EGL-based code easier, since we do not need to support
EGL-based Cairo surfaces without an associated struct window.
Signed-off-by: Pekka Paalanen <ppaalanen@gmail.com>
cairo_surface_t objects have a private set, either struct
shm_surface_data, or struct egl_window_surface_data. Use separate
private keys for each type to avoid mismatch.
This makes display_get_buffer_for_surface() safe, in that it won't
return garbage for an EGL-based cairo surface.
Signed-off-by: Pekka Paalanen <ppaalanen@gmail.com>
Struct surface_data was not really useful, and it definitely was not
used with EGL-based windows.
This also fixes a semantic mistake, where struct shm_surface_data was
put into cairo_surface_t private, but got out as struct surface_data
instead. Due to struct layout, however, this did not cause a real bug.
Signed-off-by: Pekka Paalanen <ppaalanen@gmail.com>
Leftovers from
commit f02a649a3c
Author: Kristian Høgsberg <krh@bitplanet.net>
Date: Mon Mar 12 01:05:25 2012 -0400
Consolidate image loading code and move to shared/
Signed-off-by: Pekka Paalanen <ppaalanen@gmail.com>
I do not think these are meant to be called by the applications
directly. Applications certainly do not have to call them.
Signed-off-by: Pekka Paalanen <ppaalanen@gmail.com>
Avoids a segfault whenever we get a key event, and try to set the
cursor, dereferencing a NULL input->pointer.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Stone <daniel@fooishbar.org>
The break statement wasn't copy and pasted along with the rest of the code
causing menu item before it ("Move to workspace below") to fall through to
the fullscreen case.
The intended behavior is that a quick click (press and then release
within 500ms) just pops up the menu and doesn't select anything. Then
we can mouse around and and click to select an item. Alternatively, a
click and hold (ie press and release after 500ms) lets you press right
button, mouse down on the menu item you want and release to select it.
This is how menus work in most toolkits.
The handling in weston is fine, it's there to handle the case where
the button release happens outside any client window, since the client
doesn't get those events. If such a release happens late or we get a
second release outside the popup window we shut down the popup.
The problem is in toytoolkit, where we need to select the item if we
get a release within 500ms or if we get a second release. A second
release is the case where the first release came after 500ms and
didn't pop down the menu, and the second release event is from a click
on a menu item.
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=52456
Grabbed widgets should always receive motion events as if it was the
widget that would receive it if no grab was active. This means that the
focused widget should always be passed as the widget argument to widget
motion handlers.
This reverts commit 8c9c8fcf6e.
Signed-off-by: Jonas Ådahl <jadahl@gmail.com>
The simple clients all just call wl_display_dispatch() in a while loop
without checking the return value. Now, if the server dies or other
error occurs, we get a -1 return value instead and need to break the loop.
configure.ac: The toytoolkit clients used to get libEGL linked to them
even if there was no cairo-egl. This is useless, and actually harmful on
platforms, where libEGL absolutely requires one of the GL ES libraries
to be linked in, too.
Look for EGL-related packages only for cairo-egl with toytoolkit.
window.c: protect all GL header includes with HAVE_CAIRO_EGL, since that
is the only case we can support EGL, GL, or GLESv2 at all. In the case
we do not have cairo-egl, add enough definitions to let us build the
stubs for EGL-related functions.
Remove some #ifdefs that were inside of the same #ifdef already.
These changes allow to build sorfware rendering toytoolkit clients
without any bits of EGL libs or headers.
Signed-off-by: Pekka Paalanen <ppaalanen@gmail.com>
If the keyboard modifier event was received after the key event the
modifier state would end up incorrect.
Signed-off-by: Jonas Ådahl <jadahl@gmail.com>
Callbacks registered via display_set_output_configure_handler() are
promised to be called when we know the current mode for the output. If
the following order of events happens:
1. toytoolkit binds to a wl_output global
2. application registers an output configure handler
3. the wl_output.mode events are received
Then in step 2 we would call the callback with uninitialised output
informations, giving it a 0x0 size.
To avoid such race, do not call the callback from
display_set_output_configure_handler() if the output has 0x0 size.
The wl_output.mode event will be received later, and that will trigger
the right call to the callback.
Signed-off-by: Pekka Paalanen <ppaalanen@gmail.com>
Apply wl_surface.frame request only on the next wl_surface.commit
according to the new protocol.
This makes it explicit, which repaint actually triggered the frame
callback, since commit schedules a repaint. Otherwise, something causing
a repaint before a commit could trigger the frame callback too early.
Ensure all demo clients send commit after wl_surface.frame. Note, that
GL apps rely on eglSwapBuffers() sending commit. In toytoolkit, it is
assumed that window_flush() always does a commit.
compositor-wayland assumes renderer->repaint_output does a commit.
Signed-off-by: Pekka Paalanen <ppaalanen@gmail.com>
Make input region double-buffered as specified in the new protocol.
While doing it, get rid of the undef region code, and instead use a
maximum sized real pixman region. This avoids special-casing regions
that might sometimes be undef.
As the input region is now usable by default instead of undef,
weston_surface_update_transform() does not need to reset the input
region anymore.
weston_surface_attach() no longer resets the input region on surface
size change. Therefore, also weston_seat_update_drag_surface() does not
need to reset it.
Update toytoolkit to set input region before calling wl_surface_commit()
or swapBuffers (which does commit).
Signed-off-by: Pekka Paalanen <ppaalanen@gmail.com>
Make wl_surface.set_opaque_region double-buffered as required by the new
protocol. Also, do not reset the opaque region on surface size changes
anymore. Only explicit requests from the client will change the region
now.
In clients, make sure commit happens after setting the opaque region.
Mesa does not need a fix, as it never touches the opaque region.
Signed-off-by: Pekka Paalanen <ppaalanen@gmail.com>
Use wl_surface_commit() to commit the buffer attach, as Weston now
requires.
NOTE: GL-applications are broken until you upgrade to a version of Mesa
which does wl_surface_commit() on eglSwapBuffers(). If you have
Cairo-gl, this means all toytoolkit apps, too.
simple-shm and simple-touch OTOH will work now.
Signed-off-by: Pekka Paalanen <ppaalanen@gmail.com>
Add THEME_FRAME_MAXIMIZED flag so the theming system can know not to draw
shadows for maximized windows. This allows maximized surfaces' content to be
sized and placed in a more expectable fashion.
The workspace state parameters were initialized after the first
roundtrip. If a workspace manager state event was received during this
roundtrip the state parameters were cleared leaving an incorrect state.
Signed-off-by: Jonas Ådahl <jadahl@gmail.com>
desktop-shell never returned from display_run() since it
was essentially killed when weston exited. To fix this,
it is necessary to watch for EPOLLHUP in window.c so that
toytoolkit clients will return from display_run() when
weston quits. This allows for clients to clean up
as needed.
Signed-off-by: U. Artie Eoff <ullysses.a.eoff@intel.com>
Two buttons are added to the right-click menu of the window frame for
moving a surface either up or down.
Signed-off-by: Jonas Ådahl <jadahl@gmail.com>
The correspondence between cursor functions and names of cursors has
never been standardized. As a consequence, each cursor function can be
represented as a cursor with one of several names. Be more robust when
loading cursor by trying all known names that correspond to a cursor.
This should fix https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=50487
and https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=52609 a bit more
thoroughly.
E.g. this can happen when you grab the lower right corner of a window
and move over the top of the window when resizing. In this case, the
changed width is still important and should be acted upon.
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=53560
This patch, along with the wayland patch, adds the ability to specify
a cursor theme in the weston.ini file:
[cursors]
theme=THEME_NAME
If specified, than Weston can use a specific X cursor theme for the
pointer. This relies on the 0001-Add-support-for-X-cursor-themes.patch
for wayland.
[krh: edited to use shell section and key name cursor-theme]
We default to setting the minimum size to the initial size. To set a
different minimum size than the initial size, set the minimum size first
then then initial size. Good enough for a toy toolkit.
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=50263
It is possible that a client loses the focus between receiving a
pointer.enter event and sending a pointer.set_cursor request. In that
case, the cursor surface might not be mapped and the frame callback
requested on it will never trigger.
Work around this by trying to remap the cursor surface whenever there
is a frame callback and the serial for the enter event is higher than
the cursor serial.
window.c:1173:6: warning: ignoring return value of ‘read’, declared with attribute warn_unused_result [-Wunused-result]
desktop-shell.c:305:6: warning: ignoring return value of ‘read’, declared with attribute warn_unused_result [-Wunused-result]
With the wayland change to automatically allocate the client side proxy
manually, we can now drop the code (and the FIXME) that did that and just
receive the proxy from the callback arguments.
We don't gain anything from taking a wl_shell_surface in
desktop_surface.set_background, except making wl_shell_surface
gratuitously dependent on wl_shell. In shell.c we can also handle
backgrounds in their own background_configure function which simplifies
the mapping and placement logic.
If the cursor didn't change since last time we had pointer focus we just
wouldn't change it. But whoever had pointer focus in the mean time could
have changed it, so make sure we always set the cursor after pointer enter.
If we can't find a cursor for whatever reason, don't crash the client in
pointer_surface_frame_callback.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Stone <daniel@fooishbar.org>
Since the introduction of pointer.set_cursor(), it is possible for a
client to set the surface containing the pointer image and get frame
callbacks on it thus allowing a clear implementation of animated
cursors.
This also makes the busy cursor hack of using frame callbacks on the
busy surface unnecessary.
We had duplicated code in many places, using hardcoded paths for
temporary files into more than one path. Some cases did not bother with
O_CLOEXEC, and all hardcoded paths that might not exist.
Add an OS helper function for creating a unique anonymous file with
close-on-exec semantics. The helper uses $XDG_RUNTIME_DIR as the
directory for a file.
This patch unifies the buffer file creation in both Weston and the
clients.
As simple clients are better not linking to libshared, as it would
require e.g. Cairo, they pull the OS compatibility code directly.
Android does not have mkostemp(), so a configure test is added for it,
and a fallback used if it is not available.
Changes in v2:
remove all the alternate possible directory definitions and use
XDG_RUNTIME_DIR only, and fail is it is not set.
Signed-off-by: Pekka Paalanen <ppaalanen@gmail.com>
These keymap events communicate the keymap from the compositor to the
clients via fd passing, rather than having the clients separately
compile a map.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Stone <daniel@fooishbar.org>
Instead of using a uint32_t for state everywhere (except on the wire,
where that's still the call signature), use the new
wl_keyboard_key_state enum, and explicit comparisons.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Stone <daniel@fooishbar.org>
Instead of using a uint32_t for state everywhere (except on the wire,
where that's still the call signature), use the new
wl_pointer_button_state enum, and explicit comparisons.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Stone <daniel@fooishbar.org>
This event lets the compositor inform clients of the canonical keyboard
modifier/group state. Make sure we send it at appropriate moments from
the compositor, and listen for it in clients as well.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Stone <daniel@fooishbar.org>
Here we create a new client/compositor interface in weston to allow
clients to report their x/y cursor position to the compositor. These
values are then used to center the zoom area on this point. This
is useful for everyone, especially people who are visually impaired.
Add option --self-only to dnd client. If this options is passed, the
drag will be started with no data source so that no drag and drop
events are sent to other clients.
If cairo-gl is used, display_create_surface() will create an
wl_egl_window for each surface and this will result in errors if this
surface is used as a source. Also, one can't get a wl_buffer for such
a surface wich led to crashes when trying to do so for the drag icon.
This patch works around both problems by forcing the item and drag icon
surfaces to use shm.
wl_input_device has been both renamed and split. wl_seat is now a
virtual object representing a group of logically related input devices
with related focus.
It now only generates one event: to let clients know that it has new
capabilities. It takes requests which hand back objects for the
wl_pointer, wl_keyboard and wl_touch interfaces it exposes which all
provide the old input interface, just under different names.
This commit tracks these changes in weston and the clients, as well as
similar renames (e.g. weston_input_device -> weston_seat). Some other
changes were necessary, e.g. renaming the name for the visible mouse
sprite from 'pointer' to 'cursor' so as to not conflict.
For simplicity, every seat is always exposed with all three interfaces,
although this will change as time goes on.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Stone <daniel@fooishbar.org>
Using the surface enter/leave events track which outputs the window is on and
store those in a "window_output_list" on the window.
To create this list we define a struct window_output that is the list
relationship between the window and the output.
If a client changes it's width/height values in it's widget resize handler,
the input region will be wrong because of the assumptions toytoolkit makes
in frame_resize_handler(). So far, gears is the only client that does this.
A little different from Daniels initial patch. We look up the common
modifiers at xkb init time and convert the xkb serialized modifier mask
to our own modifier bitmask.
To add greater precision when working with transformed surfaces and/or
high-resolution input devices.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Stone <daniel@fooishbar.org>
Cursor images are fairly small and having one pool for each image adds
a lot of unnecessary overhead. Instead, create one large pool and
allocated all cursor images from that.
In order to do that, however, the code that creates shm surface needed
some refactoring. This patch adds a new struct shm_pool that is used
by the cursor and also changes struct window to use it.
These new protocol events allow us to tell which outputs a surface is on, and
potentially update where we allocate our buffers from.
Signed-off-by: Casey Dahlin <cdahlin@redhat.com>
The biggest performance bottleneck while resizing is the continous
setting up and tearing down of mmaps and faulting in pages. This commit
introduces a per-window pool that we'll allocate buffers out of if it's
available. Then we set initialize it to a big shm pool when we start
resizing and free it when resizing is done.
There was a lot of code here to do a lot of work we didn't need to do.
If we damage a surface with a shm buffer attached, all we need to do
is to re-upload the damaged region to the texture. As for drm buffers,
we don't assume anything changes on attach and only update the
regions the client tells us to update in the damage request.
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.
We just set the input region to the bounding box of the window frame
and set the opaque region to be the opaque rectangle inside the window
if the child widget is opaque.
The X11 compositor currently posts its key presses as keycode - 8; this
is due to X11 having a historical minimum keycode of 8, whereas evdev is
numbered starting from 1. So while the KEY_* constants begin with
KEY_ESC at 1, the corresponding keycode in both X11 and the XKB keymaps
is 9.
window, on the other hand, was relying on xkb->min_key_code being 8 to
translate its keycodes back to useful values in the XKB 'evdev' keycode
map. min_key_code may not always be 8, for restricted subsets of the
keycode map.
Perhaps not the best solution, but at least consistent.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Stone <daniel@fooishbar.org>
This change depens on the Wayland core commit:
"protocol: remove absolute coordinates from pointer".
Remove the absolute coordinates from pointer motion and pointer_focus
events.
Signed-off-by: Pekka Paalanen <ppaalanen@gmail.com>
When window_attach_surface() calls window_get_resize_dx_dy(),
window->resize_edges is cleared. However if there is already a pending
surface to be attached, the resize won't be done until the following
call to window_attach_surface(). In this next call, since resize_edges
is now zero, the top-left corner of the window will be unchanged. If
the user is resizing from the top or left border, this causes the
resize to happen in the wrong direction.
This patch changes window_attach_surface() to call
window_get_resize_dx_dy() only if an attach will actually happen.
Signed-off-by: Ander Conselvan de Oliveira <ander.conselvan.de.oliveira@intel.com>
The code which sends the button events was checking whether there is a
focus widget with a button handler but then always sending the button
event to the grab widget. If the grab widget is different from the
focus widget at this point then it will check the wrong widget for a
button handler and potentially crash. It is also possible for there to
be no grab widget here in the following situation:
1. Press and hold down the left mouse button
2. Press and hold down the right mouse button
3. Release the left mouse button
4. Release the right mouse button
In this case the grab will be released at step 3 because the code only
keeps track of the grab for one button. Then it will try to send the
release event for the right mouse button to a NULL widget so it will
crash.
When a menu self-destructs, free also the widget and struct menu.
As menus are self-destructing, it does not make sense to store the
window pointer, since we cannot clear it automatically. Therefore,
rename window_create_menu() to window_show_menu() that does not return
the window pointer. It also calls window_schedule_redraw() internally.
Fixes Valgrind reported memory leaks.
The alternative would be to explicitly destroy the menu in application's
menu callback.
Signed-off-by: Pekka Paalanen <ppaalanen@gmail.com>
Input devices may hold a pointer to the widget being destroyed. Reset
such pointers in widget_destroy().
This fixes a use-after-free in window_destroy(), if an application
destroys its widgets before the window.
Signed-off-by: Pekka Paalanen <ppaalanen@gmail.com>
Fix a memory leak reported by Valgrind, by destroying the window
decorations widget, if it exists.
All widget pointers returned from toytoolkit to the application should
be destroyed by the application explicitly.
Signed-off-by: Pekka Paalanen <ppaalanen@gmail.com>