Output configuration can be applied to a particular output in three
ways: As a wildcard, by connector name and by identifier. This in turn
means that three different configurations must be handled at any given
time.
In the current model, this is managed by merging new configuration into
every other matching configuration. At the same time, an additional
synthetic configuration is made which matchehes both identifier and name
at the same time, further complicating logic.
Instead, manage and store each configuration independently and merge
them in order when retrieving configuration for an output. When changes
are made to a less specific configuration, clear these fields from more
specific configurations to allow the change to take effect regardless of
precedence.
Fixes: https://github.com/swaywm/sway/issues/8048
apply_output_config_to_outputs uses the specified output config to check
which outputs to apply to, and to use as backup when no config is found.
If any config matches the output, the specified config will be
disregarded.
The only remaining user of apply_output_config_to_outputs is
reset_outputs, which called apply_output_config_to_outputs with either
the first stored wildcard config, or a new empty wildcard config.
Providing a stored or empty wildcard config is practically the same as
calling `apply_all_output_configs`. Replace uses of `reset_outputs` with
`apply_all_output_configs` and remove the now unused functions.
Introduce apply_output_configs, which applies the specified matched
output configs as a single backend commit.
Reimplement apply_output_config_to_outputs using apply_output_configs.
Applying an output config has two stages: Atomic application of
wlr_output_state, and applicaiton of non-atomic state like output
layout.
Split the latter out into finalize_output_config for use in a later
commit.
This doesn't catch the error if a background changing command is
executed via swaymsg, but improves logging.
The additional checks at least propagate if e.g. forking failed.
Previous behavior was that only if resolution and refresh rate match
exactly, the mode was accepted. As fallback, the mode with the highest
refresh rate and the same resolution was chosen.
New behavior is that the mode with the closest match for the refresh
rate is used with a limit of up to 1Hz. The fallback behavior stays the same.
Additionally, the logging was made more verbose.
Support the new dwtp (disable while trackpointing) option introduced in
libinput 1.21, allowing users to control whether the trackpoint (like
those in Thinkpads, but not only) should be disabled while using the
keyboard/touchpad.
See: https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/libinput/libinput/-/issues/731
This makes it possible to hint to the renderer and backends how many
bits per channel the buffers that the compositor draws windows onto
should have. Renderers and backends may deviate from this if they
do not support the formats with higher bit depth.
Wayland compositors handle many file descriptors: client
connections, DMA-BUFs, sync_files, wl_data_device pipes, and so
on. Bump the limit to the max.
Closes: https://github.com/swaywm/sway/issues/6285
Sometimes the preferred mode is not available due to hardware
constraints (e.g. GPU or cable bandwidth limitations). In these
cases it's better to fallback to lower modes than to end up with
a black screen.
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.
Before this commit, when an output had its scale dynamically changed,
Sway would not load a cursor theme with the new scale. This results
in stale cursor images when moving the cursor into an area controlled
by the compositor, like the background or resize areas.
To reproduce:
- Using IPC, set an output scale to a value that isn't currently used
- Move the cursor into a compositor-controlled area
- The cursor will not change
Previously, we called output_disable prior to wlr_output_commit. This
mutates Sway's output state before the output commit actually succeeds.
This results in Sway's state getting out-of-sync with wlroots'.
An alternative fix [1] was to revert the changes made by output_disable
in case of failure. This is a little complicated. Instead, this patch
makes it so Sway's internal state is never changed before a successful
wlr_output commit.
We had two output flags: enabled and configured. However enabled was set
prior to the output becoming enabled, and was used to prevent the output
event handlers (specifically, the mode handler) from calling
apply_output_config again (infinite loop).
Rename enabled to enabling and use it exclusively for this purpose.
Rename configure to enabled, because that's what it really means.
[1]: https://github.com/swaywm/sway/pull/5521
Closes: https://github.com/swaywm/sway/issues/5483
We are not allowed to do what we did in #5222 and pass a `NULL` surface
wlr_seat_pointer_notify_enter(), and it's causing crashes when an
xdg-shell popup is active (see #5294 and swaywm/wlroots#2161).
Instead, solve #5220 using the new wlroots API introduced in
swaywm/wlroots#2217.
Previously in 3de1a39, it "worked by accident" in my testing since the
display being used in `map_to_output` was initialized first (the map
would not be applied because the display hadn't actually come online
yet), and was followed by a second display (at which point the map would
get applied for the first display).
Refs #5231
Some input rules, like `map_to_output`, are dependent on a specific
screen being present. This currently does not work for hotplugged
outputs, or outputs that are processed after the input device is
initially probed.
This commit fixes both cases, by reconfiguring inputs on each output
addition.
Fixes#5231.