Add a subcommand for `gaps` that allows to toggle gaps at
runtime. This functionality is part of i3-gaps since [1]
but is missing in sway.
[1] https://github.com/Airblader/i3/pull/264
Instead of disabling it for some workspace subcommands, this explicitly
calls it only in the 2 places it's actually needed: for switching to a
named or numbered workspace.
This extracts the code to a separate workspace_auto_back_and_forth
function.
It also removes the bool argument by adding an extra if statement at the call
site, and repurposes the no_auto_back_and_forth variable to
auto_back_and_forth for simpler understanding.
This forces no_auto_back_and_forth to true for `workspace
next_on_output` and `workspace prev_on_output` to keep parity with i3.
In i3, running next_on_output never changes focus to another output.
In Sway currently, with workspace_auto_back_and_forth set to yet,
running next_on_output on an output with only a single active workspace
will typically end up focussing the other output:
1. next_on_output focusses the current workspace, because it's the only
one
2. auto_back_and_forth focusses the last focussed workspace, because the
current workspace to focus is the current one. This will usually be on
the other monitor if the workspace there was last focussed.
Sway ignores SIGPIPE (by installing a SIG_IGN handler), in order to
“prevent IPC from crashing Sway”.
SIG_IGN handlers are the *only* signal handlers inherited in
sub-processes. As such, we should be a good citizen and restore
the SIGPIPE handler to its default handler.
Original bug report:
https://www.mail-archive.com/debian-bugs-dist@lists.debian.org/msg1806907.html
Until now, swaybar did not have pango markup enabled by default, even if
the sway config had it on. This patch aims to mimic the i3 behavior, but
maintaining the functionality of the "pango_markup" sway config command.
Deferred commands are only run once, during sway startup. This means
that deferring seat attachment based on whether we are reading the
config prevents devices from being reattached to the correct seat during
a config reload. Instead, only defer if the config is not yet active.
Fixes#6048.
If any error is encountered during execution of the first subcommand of
a freshly created bar configuration, parsing apparently is to be aborted
and the current bar config is freed. The pointer to that memory is left
dangling though, leading to a use-after-free on successive bar
subcommands. This quite reliably ends in a crash like so:
sway -c reproducer.config
00:00:00.083 [sway/config.c:865] Error on line 2 'foo bar': Unknown/invalid command 'foo' (s)
free(): double free detected in tcache 2
00:00:00.608 [swaynag/swaynag.c:451] failed to register with the wayland display
Aborted (core dumped)
Minimal reproducer config:
bar {
foo bar
position top
}
Other messages:
malloc(): unaligned fastbin chunk detected
double free or corruption (fasttop)
The invalid command has to be the first for a newly created bar config.
Removing the command or switching order so it's not the first one masks
the problem.
Prevent this from occuring by resetting the pointer to NULL after
freeing the memory.
Signed-off-by: Michael Weiser <michael.weiser@gmx.de>
Logic that obtains current DPMS state is put inside the handler.
sway_output from which the current DPMS state will be obtained is selected by the following logic:
* For '-' and '--' the focused output is used;
* For '*' error "Cannot apply toggle to all outputs" is reported;
* For everything else all_output_by_name_or_id() is used.
Fixes#5929.
Previously, the special case handling of scratchpad and unmark commands
was (probably accidentally) limited to criteria directly handled in the
execute_command function. This would exclude: 1. for_window criteria, as
these are handled externally for views and 2. and mouse bindings which
select target the node currently under the mouse cursor.
As a concrete example `for_window [app_id="foobar"] move scratchpad,
scratchpad show` would show (or hide due to the toggling functionality)
another window from the scratchpad, instead of showing the window with
app_id "foobar".
This commit replaces the "using_criteria" flag with "node_overridden"
with the more general notion of signifying that the node (and
container/workspace) in the current command handler context of the sway
config is not defined by the currently focused node, but instead
overridden by other means, i.e., criteria or mouse position.
When issuing a focus command on a specific container, users expect to
proceed it even if is hidden by a fullscreen window.
This matches the behavior of i3.
Pending state is currently inlined directly in the container struct,
while the current state is in a state struct. A side-effect of this is
that it is not immediately obvious that pending double-buffered state is
accessed, nor is it obvious what state is double-buffered.
Instead, use the state struct for both current and pending.
There is no need to check for transactions at the end of every user
input, as the vast majority of input will not issue transactions. This
implementation can also hide where changes are made without an
appropriate transaction commit, as a future unrelated input would issue
the commit instead.
Instead, commit transactions in places where changes are made or are
likely to be made.
This changes the move command to better match i3
behavior after the layout changes.
workspace_rejigger handled the case where containers would
escape their workspace in an orthogonal move by changing
the layout to accomodate them, but this case is now handled
within the loop.
Some comparisons of current Sway versus i3 behavior:
1) T[T[T[app]]] + move left
* Sway: T[app]
* i3: T[T[app]]
2) H[V[H[V[app]]]] + move left
* Sway: H[app]
* i3: H[V[app]]
After this commit, Sway behavior matches i3. The intermediate states
are now:
T[T[T[app]]] -> T[T[app T[]]] -> T[T[app]]
H[V[H[V[app]]]] -> H[V[app H[V[]]]] -> H[V[app]]
In i3 the layout command on a workspace affects the workspace layout
only on empty workspaces. Otherwise children are placed in a new
container with the desired layout to preserve the workspace layout.
To query whether a container is sticky, checking `con->is_sticky` is
insufficient. `container_is_floating_or_child` must also return true;
this led to a lot of repetition.
This commit introduces `container_is_sticky[_or_child]` functions, and
switches all stickiness checks to use them. (Including ones where the
container is already known to be floating, for consistency.)
A "resize shrink width 1px" will cause grow_x to be 0 while grow_width is -1,
incorrectly rejecting the command even though the resize is not a noop. Fix
this by checking width/height instead of x/y.
Prior to this commit, having a layout like T[app1 V[app2]], focusing
app2, and then doing `move left` would result in T[app2 app1]. Now, the
resulting layout is T[app1 app2], which matches i3 behavior.
`container_flatten` updates `container->parent`, meaning that the
existing check would never be true.
`!*rgba` tests if the first byte of rgba isn't `'\0'`.
`hex_to_rgba_hex` returns NULL if `parse_color` fails. There's a null
pointer dereference in that case. The intended behavior is `!rgba`.
If the mouse/cursor/pointer is near the edge of an output when a "move
position to pointer" command is run, then the floating container will be
constrained to fit inside the bounds of the output as much as possible.
This behavior matches what i3 does in this scenario. I also think it is
a better user experience.
Relates to #4906
The logic for the bounds check follows the implementation in i3: 7330778223/src/floating.c (L536)
If moving e.g. `T[app app]` into a new workspace with `workspace_layout
tabbed`, then post-move the tree in that workspace will be `T[T[app
app]]`. This still happens with horizontal or vertical workspace layout,
but is less visible since those containers have no decorations.
Fixes#5426.
This emits frame events for the seat_cmd_cursor subcommands. The
wl_pointer frame event are required to notify clients when to process
the events. It will now be emitted after cursor movement, button press,
button release, and axis events.
Add a separate per-view shortcuts_inhibitor command that can be used
with criteria to override the per-seat defaults. This allows to e.g.
disable shortcuts inhibiting globally but enable it for specific,
known-good virtualization and remote desktop software or, alternatively,
to blacklist that one slightly broken piece of software that just
doesn't seem to get it right but insists on trying.
Add a flag to sway_view and handling logic in the input manager that
respects that flag if configured but falls back to per-seat config
otherwise. Add the actual command but with just enable and disable
subcommands since there's no value in duplicating the per-seat
activate/deactivate/toggle logic here. Split the inhibitor retrieval
helper in two so we can use the backend half in the command to retrieve
inhibitors for a specific surface and not just the currently focused
one. Extend the manual page with documentation of the command and
references to its per-seat sibling and usefulness with criteria.
Signed-off-by: Michael Weiser <michael.weiser@gmx.de>
This allows e.g. triggering one command while a key is held, then
triggering another to undo the change performed by it afterwards. One
use case for this is triggering push-to-talk functionality for VoIP
tools without granting them full access to all input events.
Fixes#3151
* check for workspace command name arg (fix#5131)
For the 'workspace <name> output <output>' command, output_location must
be greater than zero or the attempt to get the workspace name with
join_args will segfault or abort() (depending on the flavor of
sway_assert() in use). This checks and returns an error instead.
* put workspace output error string on one line
To ease grepping as requested
* check for name in workspace gaps command as well
A malformed command here will lead to the same result seen in #5131, so
add a check. Done inside the cmd_workspace_gaps() function itself, to
take advantage of the existing 'Expected...' string.
Remove some unnecessary brackets in an error condition check identified
during review of the shortcuts inhibitor command code (#5021).
Signed-off-by: Michael Weiser <michael.weiser@gmx.de>
Add a command to influence keyboard shortcuts inhibitors. In its current
form it can be used to activate, deactivate or toggle an existing
inhibitor on the surface currently receiving input. This can be used to
define an escape shortcut such as:
bindsym --inhibited $mod+Escape seat - shortcuts_inhibitor deactivate
It also allows the user to configure a per-seat default of whether
keyboard inhibitors are honoured by default (the default) or not. Using
the activate/toggle command they can then enable the lingering inhibitor
at a later time of their choosing.
As a side effect this allows to specifically address a named seat for
actions as well, whatever use-case that might serve.
Signed-off-by: Michael Weiser <michael.weiser@gmx.de>
Adding support for the keyboard shortcuts inhibit protocol allows remote
desktop and virtualisation software to receive all keyboard input in
order to pass it through to their clients so users can fully interact
the their remote/virtual session. The software usually provides its own
key combination to release its "grab" to all keyboard input. The
inhibitor can be deactivated by the user by removing focus from the
surface using another input device such as the pointer.
Use support for the procotol in wlroots to add support to sway. Extend
the input manager with handlers for inhibitor creation and destruction
and appropriate bookkeeping. Attach the inhibitors to the seats they
apply to to avoid having to search the list of all currently existing
inhibitors on every keystroke and passing the inhibitor manager around.
Add a helper function to retrieve the inhibitor applying to the
currently focused surface of a seat, if one exists.
Extend bindsym with a flag for bindings that should be processed even if
an inhibitor is active. Conversely this disables all normal shortcuts if
an inhibitor is found for the currently focused surface in
keyboard::handle_key_event() since they don't have that flag set. Use
above helper function to determine if an inhibitor exists for the
surface that would eventually receive input.
Signed-off-by: Michael Weiser <michael.weiser@gmx.de>
This enables/disables adaptive synchronization on the output.
For now, the default is disabled because it might cause flickering on
some hardware if clients don't submit frames at regular enough
intervals. In the future an "auto" option will only enable adaptive sync
if a fullscreen client opts-in via a Wayland protocol.
This adds support for input type configs to input_cmd_events. This works
similar to the wildcard handling that existed where configs for the
devices are stored and the type config is reset to INT_MIN so that it
does not override.
This also condenses the toggle_send_events and
toggle_wildcard_send_events functions into a single function to reduce
code duplication.
This patch makes it so users that have configured their screen with a
transform don't have to update their config after the wlroots breaking
change.
References: https://github.com/swaywm/wlroots/pull/2023
The condition in test_mark was checking the negation of list_seq_find.
This works fine for the first mark, but fails for every other mark. This
fixes the condition to check for anything other than -1, which is the
value returned from list_seq_find for index not found.
This makes it so invalid configs will return the exit code 1 when the
validation flag is given. This also reduces the log level to SWAY_ERROR,
which makes it so only the errors are shown. If someone wants more
verbose output, the can use the -V/--verbose or -d/--debug flags.
Additionally, this also makes it so swaybg will not be spawned when
validating the config.
Because the layout code rounds down the dimensions of the windows
resizing would often be off by one pixel. The width/height fraction
would not exactly reflect the final computed width and so the resize
code would end up calculating things wrong.
To fix this first snap the container size fractions to the pixel grid
and only then do the resize. Also use round() instead of floor() during
layout to avoid a slightly too small width. This applies in two cases:
1. For the container we are actually resizing using floor() might result
in being 1px too small.
2. For the other containers it might result in resizing them down by 1px
and then if the container being resized is the last all those extra
pixels would make the resize too large.
Fixes#4391
For i3 compatibility, allow the indicator and child_border colors values
to be optional. The indicator will fallback to sane defaults and
child_border will fallback to the background color for the class.
This is the third commit in a series of commits to refactor color
handling in sway. This removes add_color from commands.c. It was only
being used by bar_cmd_colors. This also changes the functions to use
parse_color which is used to validate rgb(a) colors throughout the code
base and is also what i3bar is using to parse the colors after they are
passed over ipc. After parsing the color and ensuring it is valid, the
rgba hex string is then generated using snprintf. This refactor also
ensures that all the colors for the command are valid before applying
any of them.
This is the second in a series of commits to refactor the color handling
in sway. This removes the duplicated color parsing code in
sway/commands/client.c. Additionally, this combines the parsing of
colors to float arrays with that in sway/config.c and introduces a
color_to_rgba function in commom/util.c.
As an added bonus, this also makes it so non of the colors in a border
color class will be changed unless all of the colors specified are
valid. This ensures that an invalid command does not get partially
applied.
This removes `seat <seat> keyboard_grouping keymap` and replaces it with
`seat <seat> keyboard_grouping smart`. The smart keyboard grouping will
group based on both the keymap and repeat info. The reasoning for this
is that deciding what the repeat info should be for a group is either
arbitrary or non-deterministic when multiple keyboards in the group have
repeat info configured (unless somehow exposed to the user in a
reproducible uniquely identifiable fashion).
This adds seat configuration options which can be used to configure what
events affect the idle behavior of sway.
An example use-case is mobile devices: you would remove touch from the
list of idle_wake events. This allows the phone to stay on while you're
actively using it, but doesn't wake from idle on touch events while it's
sleeping in your pocket.
For the validation pass of reloading, there is no need to touch swaybg,
swaynag, inputs, outputs, or seats. This drastically improves the speed
of a reload by skipping over the expensive I/O configuration and
handling of wayland clients. As long as the syntax is valid, the
CMD_FAILURE's can be relayed during the actual reload.
A wlr_keyboard_group allows for multiple keyboard devices to be
combined into one logical keyboard. This is useful for keyboards that
are split into multiple input devices despite appearing as one physical
keyboard in the user's mind.
This adds support for wlr_keyboard_groups to sway. There are two
keyboard groupings currently supported, which can be set on a per-seat
basis. The first keyboard grouping is none, which disables all grouping
and provides no functional change. The second is keymap, which groups
the keyboard devices in the seat by their keymap. With this grouping,
the effective layout and repeat info is also synced across keyboard
devices in the seat. Device specific bindings will still be executed as
normal, but everything else related to key and modifier events will be
handled by the keyboard group's keyboard.
This adds complete support for the barconfig_update ipc event. This also
changes the bar command and subcommand handlers to correctly emit the
event. This makes it so all bar subcommands other than id and
swaybar_command are dynamically changeable at runtime. sway-bar.5 has
been updated accordingly