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.
This adds the actual glyphs/utf-8 characters to the comments of CS_SPECIAL
(DEC special graphics set). They all work on my system with "Monospace" or
"Bitstream" font. But keep the mnemonics so if the UTF8 characters are not
displayed correctly, the comments are still readable.
I don't know if gcc actually reads data as UTF-8 or if C code actually
allows all UTF8 characters. However, unless it reads as "*/" in ASCII, it
shouldn't matter inside of comments.
Anyway, it compiles fine with gcc-4.7.0/amd64 here.
Signed-off-by: David Herrmann <dh.herrmann@googlemail.com>
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.
Simple clients were relying on AM_CFLAGS and AM_CPPFLAGS set for
toytoolkit clients. With toytoolkit clients disabled, the build fails
with missing wayland-client.h.
Move AM_CFLAGS and AM_CPPFLAGS outside of conditional sections, since
they are meant to be global settings.
Let simple clients override AM_CPPFLAGS with their own
SIMPLE_CLIENT_CFLAGS, which the configure script already sets up for us,
but was unused until now.
Signed-off-by: Pekka Paalanen <ppaalanen@gmail.com>
Previously, simple-shm was rendering an image that looked like stride
gone wrong somewhere, and was quite confusing if you did not know it was
supposed to look like that.
Replace the drawing code. Two circles, inner and outer, now delimit
three co-centric areas. The outmost area from surface borders to outer
circle contains horizontal gradients that move (animate) to the left.
The area between outer and inner circles contains vertical gradients
that move upwards. The center disc has circular gradients moving towards
the center.
The circles are not ellipses.
Diagnostics:
The X-channel is manipulated so, that if a compositor takes the XRGB
image, and uses the X channel as alpha instead of ignoring it, the whole
image will be crossed out by two lines that either quickly saturate to
white or show through with additive blending. Does not work on black
background.
Signed-off-by: Pekka Paalanen <ppaalanen@gmail.com>
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>
Updates the .gitignore files for clients and tests to reflect a new test and a
couple of renamed applications.
Signed-off-by: Casey Dahlin <cdahlin@redhat.com>
lockscreen, homescreen and shell launchers are falling back okay already and
only lockscreen icon was missing some way to keep the shell client running in
the absence of images. This patch fix it.
Signed-off-by: Tiago Vignatti <tiago.vignatti@intel.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.
A couple of fixes were made: Weston tablet-shell needed to use weston_layer,
so the compositor could rebuild the surface list correctly when repainting;
homescreen and locking are using the widget + window abstration of toytoolkit;
and widget_set_redraw_handler are being set for widgets redraw.
Also, it was given some basic meaning for lockscreen_button_handler, which
was completely disabled before. As a clean up, I updated the global listener
mechanism on tablet-shell client, using the regular way of registering a
handler instead wl_display_roundtrip -> wl_display_get_global.
Switcher still without code to proper work and the same for tablet-shell
clients, which are not launched.
krh: Edited to not scale down homescreen icons, use new load_cairo_surface()
for image loading.
Signed-off-by: Tiago Vignatti <tiago.vignatti@intel.com>
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.
This makes the compositor and demo clients work on the current nouveau
nvfx driver. Obviously does not fix any clients that actually want a
depth buffer, but this does allow more people to at least try wayland.
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.
If you don't have anything at ~/.config/weston-desktop-shell.ini and
have weston installed somewhere other than /usr, then this patch will
help.
Cheers,
Signed-off-by: Rodney Lorrimar <rodney@rodney.id.au>
We end up doing an attach at the non-fullscreen size before resizing to
fullscreen, causing the terminal to jump to the center for a frame before we
render the fullscreen image.
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>
Add widget_set_size in the initiate time to allow smoke get the
correct surface later. Or it will report segment fault error because
of the null surface.
Also add resize_handler to not allow resizing just like flower.
Signed-off-by: Juan Zhao <juan.j.zhao@linux.intel.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>
Remove all unneeded resizor features, and add the feature why clickdot
exists: put a visible marker to exactly where mouse was clicked.
This app can be used to check input coordinate transformations in a
compositor.
Signed-off-by: Pekka Paalanen <ppaalanen@gmail.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>