Instead of having a build-time option to enable/disable xwayland
support, just use the wlroots build config: enable xwayland in
Sway if it was enabled when building wlroots. I don't see any
use-case for disabling xwayland in Sway when enabled in wlroots:
Sway doesn't pull in any additional dependency (just pulls in
dependencies that wlroots already needs). We have a config command
to disable xwayland at runtime anyways.
This makes it so xwayland behaves the same way as other features
such as libinput backend and session support. This also reduces
the build matrix (less combinations of build options).
I think we originally introduced the xwayland option when we didn't
have a good way to figure out the wlroots build config from the
Sway build system.
My code archaeology isn't good enough to determine what this is here
for, but it isn't correct. We should be able to move containers in a
direction without focusing them. AFAICT i3 doesn't do this, so we
shouldn't either.
This fixes ipc commands like move <dir> with criteria that apply to
containers which are not the current focus.
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.
When using the `map_from_region` for pen tables, we will usually make
the available area as big as possible while maintaining the proportions
with the screen.
As most of the tablets uses a 16:10 ratios while the most popular screen
ratios is still 16:9, the argument for most people should be `0x0 1x0.9`
to have the maximum effective area.
However, the argument above won't work because the current code will
treat `0x...` as a hexadecimal number, instead of setting both `x` and
`y` to `0`.
This fix allows the use of the following syntax:
```
input type:tablet_tool {
map_from_region 0x0 1x0.9
}
```
Sway has two knobs to control idling:
- seat idle_inhibit: when the seat is active (ie. not idle), this
extends the active state. When the seat is idle, this is
ignored.
- seat idle_wake: when the seat is idle, this wakes up the seat.
When the seat is active, this is ignored.
The motivation for the deprecation is two-fold:
- The concept of "seat idle state" is ill-defined. Each idle-notify-v1
client will pass a different idle timeout. With the old logic, a
seat was declared idle if and only if all idle-notify-v1 timeouts have
expired. However, if only a portion of the timeouts have expired,
then some clients would wake up, and the rest would stay active.
This is inconsistent with the definition of idle_inhibit/idle_wake:
idle_inhibit was used for clients which are waking up.
- It never worked properly with the new idle-notify-v1 protocol
and no-one noticed. Only the legacy KDE idle protocol is taken
into account, but that protocol is not used anymore.
This makes the behavior of floating containers more consistent with i3.
The coordinates of the container are scaled when the size of the
workspace it is on changes or when the container is moved
between workspaces on different outputs.
For scratchpad containers, add a new state that preserves the dimensions
of the last output the window appeared on. This is necessary because
after a container is hidden in the scratchpad, we expect it to be in the
same relative position on the output when it reappears. We can't just
use the container's attached workspace because that workspace's
dimensions might have been changed or the workspace as a whole could
have been destroyed.
This function was already declared in container.h but defined in
commands/swap.c for some unknown reason. Everything in commands/ assumes
the handler context has been set appropriately by the command preludes
but this function snuck its way into seatop_* which doesn't set anything
in the handler context.
The fact that the seatop drag actions manipulate the focus without
custody of the seat means they are definitely very broken in multiseat.
efd83cb8 added the rotation_angle command but it didn't insert it in
the proper place in the list, so the repeat_delay and repeat_rate
commands became unusable.
See: https://github.com/swaywm/sway/issues/4511
Adds a bool config option `primary_selection`, which explicitly
enables/disables the primary selection clipboard. Defaults to enabled.
This is implemented as a launch-only option which enables or disables the creation of the
`zwp_primary_selection_device_manager_v1` global.
Co-authored-by: Tilde Rose <t1lde@protonmail.com>
This removes the need to rename the pid_workspaces when a workspace
is renamed.
It also opens the possibility of tracking other node types. Tracking
containers would allow application to be placed correctly in the
container tree even if the user has moved their focus elsewhere since
it was launched.
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
Use pango to parse font configuration early, and reject the command as
invalid if the value is invalid for pango. Since we're already parsing
the font into a `PangoFontDescription`, keep that instance around and
avoid re-parsing the font each time we render text.
Fixes: https://github.com/swaywm/sway/issues/6805
If the input device is quoted, which is common when using variables in the
config file, those quotes must be ignored here, or the input device will be
ignored.
Fixes#7029.
The "dpms" command refers to VESA Display Power Management
Signaling, a deprecated standard. It's superseded by VESA DPM.
Instead of tying out command name to a particular standard, use the
neutral term "power".