When changing a surface from managed to unmanaged in handle_map(), the
call to handle_destroy(.., view) causes the sway_xwayland_view pointed
to by the untyped wlr_xwayland_surface.data field to become invalid
garbage, yet the untyped wlr_xwayland_surface.data continues to point
at it. In particular: view_get_*(view_from_wlr_surface(..)), even
with appropriate NULL checking, will crash sway when this codepath is
exercised (reliable test case: drop-down menus in Google Earth).
Some examples use comma to separate x and y for setting the output
position which is wrong.
Let's change it to spaces, as correctly demonstrated in the
`output <name> position|pos <X> <Y>` section.
Popups are positioned relative to local surface coordinates of the
parent surface. There's no need to consider values set with
xdg_surface.set_window_geometry for parent surfaces.
Sometimes when using direct scan-out, some flickering between the
fullscreen app and the regular desktop could be seen.
This happened because we called wlr_output_attach_render and then
wlr_output_attach_buffer for direct scan-out. wlr_output_attach_render
makes the OpenGL context current but also attaches the OpenGL buffer to
the primary plane apparently (all of this happens inside
eglMakeCurrent).
This patch moves the scan-out logic outside of output_render, before
wlr_output_attach_render. This lines it up with rootston's
implementation. This also makes more sense since no rendering is
involved when using direct scan-out.
Sorry about that, I should've tested this with more clients. The new
code has been tested with mpv and a GLFW demo.
Sway has basic support for drawing tablets, but does not expose
properties such as pressure sensitivity. This implements the wlr tablet
v2 protocol, providing tablet events to Wayland clients.
If the view was mapped as fullscreen or the view was assigned either a
workspace or output, the pid was not being populated since it was
occurring as part of the pid mapping check in select_workspace. This
extracts the pid population and makes it so it is always executed
Subsurfaces (in most cases popups) aren't decorated by sway
and will never have any borders, but may be drawn beyond container
boundaries producing false positive when searching for edge.
So we want to skip edge search when handling mouse event on subsurface.
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
This matches i3's behavior of only focusing a container when pressed.
This allows for `bindsym button1 nop`, `bindsym BTN_LEFT nop`, or
`bindcode 272 nop` to be used to disable focusing when clicking on the
title (or with additional flags to bind{code,sym} other portions of
the container).
Without this additional condition, the user would need both
`bindsym button1 nop` and `bindsym --release button1 nop` to override
both the pressed and released behavior.
Focused layers are not cleared when destroyed, they are cleared on unmap.
Giving focus to an unmapped layer surface is (1) incorrect and (2) triggers a
use-after-free.
Closes: https://github.com/swaywm/sway/issues/4517
This make seat_update_capabilities set cursor image only if
there was no pointer cap before update. This avoid resetting
cursor to left_ptr if an input device is removed.
In cmd_mode, the mode is currently being reset to the default mode after
a mode subcommand handler is executed. This stores and restores the mode
instead
When moving to a scratchpad hidden container (using `move
[window|container] [to] mark <mark>`), this moves the container to the
scratchpad (equivalent to `move [window|container] [to] scratchpad`).
Previously, this would crash since the destination did not have a
workspace.
Match i3's behavior and only return one status response per command,
even if it applies to several nodes.
Also returns an error if the criteria returns an empty match.
Closes#4483
It looks like floating_scroll was still in the sway(5) man page as a
remnant of the 0.x era. This just removes it from the man page since it
is no longer a valid command. Mouse bindings with Button4-7 can be used
instead
This just adds a force option to cmd_xwayland that allows for xwayland
to be immediately launched instead of lazily launched. This is useful
for slower machines so it can be part of the startup time instead of
when the user is actively trying to use it
This keeps track of whether surfaces received a key press event and
will only send a key release event if the pressed event was sent. This
also requires changing the keycodes that are sent via wl_keyboard_enter
to only include those that were previously sent. This makes it so
surfaces do not receive key release events for keys that they never
received a key press for and makes it so switching focus doesn't leak
keycodes that were consumed by bindings.
This adds an axis handler to seatop_down so that it is possible to
manually scroll while having a mouse button down. This is mainly useful
for selecting text. Some applications may not automatically scroll when
the cursor is near the edge of the application or the user may just
prefer manually scrolling for more control over the scrolling speed.
This just specifies that both cmd_font and bar_cmd_font should be
specified using the pango font description and adds a link to the pango
documentation regarding the font description
This copies the width and height fractions from the container to the
container replacing it. Without setting these values, the container
is treated as a new container and throws off the existing sizing. Since
one container is replacing the other, it makes sense for the sizing to
remain the same.
Since each seat has its own focus, do not destroy a workspace until it
is no longer focused by any seat. This prevents seats from being forced
to evacuate the workspace just because another seat switched focus away
from it
In handle_seat_node_destroy, it was possible to focus the node attached
to the seat node that is being destroyed when an empty workspace was
being destroyed in a multiple seat environment. This resulted in
infinite recursion when attempting to destroy the workspace. This just
moves the seat node destruction higher so it cannot be the focus
inactive for the seat. This is the same ordering that is applied to
destruction of seat nodes for containers
Since output names can change in various configurations, including
DisplayPort MST, prefer output identifiers for the output priority.
Users can still use `workspace <ws> output <names-or-ids>`, but any
output that is programmatically added to the list will be added under
the output identifier. If the output name exists in the list (from the
user workspace output configs), then that will be retained instead of
switching to the output identifier for that output.