For mouse_warping cursor to correctly work on newly spawned containers,
the workspace needs to be arranged before the cursor is warped.
The shell functions each implement their own fullscreen and arrange checks,
move them into the view_map function and pass their states via boolean arguments.
Fixes#2819
The basic idea here is to apply rounding after scaling. It's not as
simple as this, though, and I've detailed it in the comments for a
function.
In order to fix some pixel leaks in the title bar, I found it easier to
change how we place rectangles to fill the area. Instead of placing two
rectangles across the full width above and below the title and having
shorter rectangles in the inner area, it's now pieced together in
vertical chunks. This method involves drawing two less rectangles per
container.
This introduces a new view_impl function: is_transient_for. Similar to
container_has_ancestor but works using the surface parents rather than
the tree.
This patch modifies view_is_visible, container_at and so on to allow
transient views to function normally when they're in front of a
fullscreen view.
The previous behaviour was to damage the entire view, which would
recurse into each popup. This patch makes it damage only the popup's
surface, and respect the surface damage given by the client.
This adds listeners to the popup's map and unmap events rather than
doing the damage in the create and destroy functions. To get the popup's
position relative to the view, a new child_impl function get_root_coords
has been introduced, which traverses up the parents.
* Have multiple outputs
* Launch swaylock
* Unplug an output (possibly has to be the last "connected" one)
* The swaylock surface on the remaining output would not respond to key
events
This was happening because when the output destroys, focus was not given
to the other swaylock surface.
This patch makes focus be transferred to another surface owned by the
same Wayland client, but only if input was inhibited by the surface
being destroyed, and only if it's in the overlay layer. I figure it's
best to be overly specific and relax the requirements later if needed.
This patch removes a check in seat_set_focus_surface which was
preventing focus from being passed from a layer surface to any other
surface. I don't know of a use case for this check, but it's possible
that this change could produce issues.
This replaces view.using_csd with a new border mode: B_CSD. This also
removes sway_xdg_shell{_v6}_view.deco_mode and
view->has_client_side_decorations as we can now get these from the
border.
You can use `border toggle` to cycle through the modes including CSD, or
use `border csd` to set it directly. The client must support the
xdg-decoration protocol, and the only client I know of that does is the
example in wlroots.
If the client switches from SSD to CSD without us expecting it (via the
server-decoration protocol), we stash the previous border type into
view.saved_border so we can restore it if the client returns to SSD. I
haven't found a way to test this though.
This adds a `con` argument to `execute_command` which allows you to
specify the container to execute the command on. In most cases it leaves
it as `NULL` which makes it use the focused node. We only set it when
executing `for_window` criteria such as when a view maps. This means we
don't send unnecessary IPC focus events, and fixes a crash when the
criteria command is `move scratchpad` (because we can't give focus to a
hidden scratchpad container).
Each of the shell map handlers now check to see if the view has a
workspace. It won't have a workspace if criteria has moved it to the
scratchpad.
When destroying an idle-inhibiting client, idle_inhibit_v1_check_active can get
called from transaction_progress_queue on a view with a null container.
view_is_visible does not handle a view in this state.
This does the following:
* Adds a baseline argument to get_text_size (the baseline is the
distance from the top of the texture to the baseline).
* Stores the baseline in the container when calculating the title
height.
* Takes the baseline into account when calculating the config's max font
height.
* When rendering, pads the textures according to the baseline so they
line up.
There was code that attempted to fill in the gap below the title texture
when the texture isn't tall enough, but this only worked when the output
was positioned at 0,0. The reason is that render_rect expects a box
passed in a hybrid layout-local/output-buffer-local system, and we were
passing purely output-buffer-local. I've added a comment documenting
this.
By the way, we can't use layout-local coordinates for the rectangle box
because in some cases we set the box based on a texture size. Texture
sizes are buffer-local, and we'd have to divide them to bring it back to
layout-local which means losing precision. We could use
output-buffer-local coordinates for the box, but this would require
translating the coordinates from layout-local to output-buffer-local in
many places during rendering.
This patch also vertically centers the text inside the title bar.
This fixes pinentry-gtk-2, but might make other views floating which
would otherwise be tiled. This patch is more of a trial which could end
up becoming a permanent fix.
When rendering, the workspace for the output needs to be retrieved from
the output's `current` state. output_get_active_workspace returns the
pending workspace, which crashes if the pending workspace is new and
hasn't completed a transaction yet.
Suppose the following:
* Transactions are already in progress - say transaction A.
* View A maps, which creates transaction B and appends it to the
transaction queue.
* View B maps, which creates transaction C and appends it to the queue.
* View A unmaps, which creates transaction D and appends it to the
queue.
* Transaction A completes, so transaction B attempts to save View A's
buffer, but this doesn't exist so it saves nothing.
* Rendering code attempts to render View A, but there is no saved buffer
nor live buffer that it can use.
Rather than implement an elaborate solution for a rare circumstance,
I've take the safe option of just not rendering anything for that view.
It means that if you reproduce the scenario above, you might get the
title and borders rendered but no surface.
This commit changes the meaning of sway_container so that it only refers
to layout containers and view containers. Workspaces, outputs and the
root are no longer known as containers. Instead, root, outputs,
workspaces and containers are all a type of node, and containers come in
two types: layout containers and view containers.
In addition to the above, this implements type safe variables. This
means we use specific types such as sway_output and sway_workspace
instead of generic containers or nodes. However, it's worth noting that
in a few places places (eg. seat focus and transactions) referring to
them in a generic way is unavoidable which is why we still use nodes in
some places.
If you want a TL;DR, look at node.h, as well as the struct definitions
for root, output, workspace and container. Note that sway_output now
contains a workspaces list, and workspaces now contain a tiling and
floating list, and containers now contain a pointer back to the
workspace.
There are now functions for seat_get_focused_workspace and
seat_get_focused_container. The latter will return NULL if a workspace
itself is focused. Most other seat functions like seat_get_focus and
seat_set_focus now accept and return nodes.
In the config->handler_context struct, current_container has been
replaced with three pointers: node, container and workspace. node is the
same as what current_container was, while workspace is the workspace
that the node resides on and container is the actual container, which
may be NULL if a workspace itself is focused.
The global root_container variable has been replaced with one simply
called root, which is a pointer to the sway_root instance.
The way outputs are created, enabled, disabled and destroyed has
changed. Previously we'd wrap the sway_output in a container when it is
enabled, but as we don't have containers any more it needs a different
approach. The output_create and output_destroy functions previously
created/destroyed the container, but now they create/destroy the
sway_output. There is a new function output_disable to disable an output
without destroying it.
Containers have a new view property. If this is populated then the
container is a view container, otherwise it's a layout container. Like
before, this property is immutable for the life of the container.
Containers have both a `sway_container *parent` and
`sway_workspace *workspace`. As we use specific types now, parent cannot
point to a workspace so it'll be NULL for containers which are direct
children of the workspace. The workspace property is set for all
containers, except those which are hidden in the scratchpad as they have
no workspace.
In some cases we need to refer to workspaces in a container-like way.
For example, workspaces have layout and children, but when using
specific types this makes it difficult. Likewise, it's difficult for a
container to get its parent's layout when the parent could be another
container or a workspace. To make it easier, some helper functions have
been created: container_parent_layout and container_get_siblings.
container_remove_child has been renamed to container_detach and
container_replace_child has been renamed to container_replace.
`container_handle_fullscreen_reparent(con, old_parent)` has had the
old_parent removed. We now unfullscreen the workspace when detaching the
container, so this function is simplified and only needs one argument
now.
container_notify_subtree_changed has been renamed to
container_update_representation. This is more descriptive of its
purpose. I also wanted to be able to call it with whatever container was
changed rather than the container's parent, which makes bubbling up to
the workspace easier.
There are now state structs per node thing. ie. sway_output_state,
sway_workspace_state and sway_container_state.
The focus, move and layout commands have been completely refactored to
work with the specific types. I considered making these a separate PR,
but I'd be backporting my changes only to replace them again, and it's
easier just to test everything at once.
Depends on https://github.com/swaywm/wlroots/pull/1222.
I don't know of a program that sets the state to modal without setting
the window type, but I know the modal property works because logging the
property shows it's true for the Firefox Open File dialog.
This moves the arrange_windows call into the arrange_layers function,
where we know the output actually needs to be arranged.
Additionally, we shouldn't set focus to the parent of an unknown
container type, because the parent may be an output and this causes a
crash because outputs can't have direct focus.
Fixes#2543