- child would leak in the workspace_record_pid path
- removing malloc lets us get rid of That Comment nobody seems
to remember what it was about
- we would leak pipe fds on first fork failling
- we didn't return an error if second fork failed
- the final executed process still had both pipe fds
(would show up in /proc/23560/fd in launched programs)
- we would write twice to the pipe if execl failed for some reason
(e.g. if /bin/sh doesn't exist?!)
When you spawn a process with the exec command, sway now notes the
workspace you had focused and the pid of the child process, then assigns
that workspace to the child when its window appears.
Some of this is carried over from sway 0.15, but with some major
refactoring and centralization of state.
We were arranging a parent which may have been deleted by the reaper,
which meant the `current` children list of the surviving parent had a
dangling pointer.
Instead, we now reap the workspace.
- fixes a double-free error when access() failed.
- refactor code to make memory managment (alloc/free) more straightforward
- do not bring the temporary wordexp_t struct around
- do not postpone errors handling
container_destroy was calling container_reap_empty, which calls
container_destroy and so on. Eventually the original container_destroy
would return a NULL pointer to the caller which caused a crash.
This also fixes an arrange on the wrong container when moving views in
and out of stacks.
if src is NULL due to a previous error we cannot use it in the command
result string.
Moreover if `src` points to `p.we_wordv[0]` we cannot use it after
`wordfree(&p)` in the command result string.
Bonus feature: If there was an error accessing the file, the string
rapresentation of the error is now included in the command result
string.
Sort the list comprising the set of keys for the binding in ascending
order. (Keyboard shortcuts depend only on the set of simultaneously
pressed keys, not their order, so this change should have no external
effect.) This simplifies comparisons between bindings.
* The arrange_foo functions are now replaced with arrange_and_commit, or
with manually created transactions and arrange_windows x2.
* The arrange functions are now only called from the highest level
functions rather than from both high level and low level functions.
* Due to the previous point, view_set_fullscreen_raw and
view_set_fullscreen are both merged into one function again.
* Floating and fullscreen are now working with transactions.
Adds the --locked flag to bindsym and bindcode commands.
When a keyboard's associated seat has an exclusive client
(i.e, a screenlocker), then bindings are only executed if
they have the locked flag. When there is no such client,
this restriction is lifted.
* Add and use lenient_strcat and lenient_strncat functions
* Rename `concatenate_child_titles` function as that's no longer what it
does
* Rename `container_notify_child_title_changed` because we only need to
notify that the tree structure has changed, not titles
* Don't notify parents when a child changes its title
* Update ancestor titles when changing a container's layout
* Eg. create nested tabs and change the inner container to stacking
* No need to store tree presentation in both container->name and
formatted_title
Swayidle handles idle events and allows
for dpms and lockscreen handling. It also
handles systemd sleep events, and can
raise a lockscreen on sleep
Fixes#541
In Sway 0.15, moving a window to another workspace would cause a window on the source workspace to be focused. This restores that behavior, allowing you to quickly move a lot of windows to another workspace.
The criteria struct now uses properties for each token type rather than
the list_t list of tokens. The reason for this is that different token
types have different data types: pcre, string and number to name a few.
This solution should be more flexible moving forward. A bonus of this is
that criteria is now easier to understand when looking at the struct
definition.
The criteria parser has been rewritten because the previous one didn't
support valueless pairs (eg. [class="foo" floating]).
Criteria now has types. Types at the moment are CT_COMMAND,
CT_ASSIGN_WORKSPACE and CT_ASSIGN_OUTPUT. i3 uses types as well.
Previously the assign command was creating a criteria with 'move to
workspace <name>' as its command, but this caused the window to appear
briefly on the focused workspace before being moved to the assigned
workspace. It now creates the view directly in the assigned workspace.
Each view will only execute a given criteria once. This is achieved by
storing a list of executed criteria in the view. This is the same
strategy used by i3.
Escaping now works properly. Previously you could do things like
[class="Fire\"fox"] and the stored value would be 'Fire\"fox', but it
should be (and now is) 'Fire"fox'.
The public functions in criteria.c are now all prefixed with criteria_.
Xwayland views now listen to the set_title, set_class and
set_window_type events and criteria will be run when these happen. XDG
shell has none of these events so it continues to update the title in
handle_commit.
Each view type's get_prop function has been split into get_string_prop
and get_int_prop because some properties like the X11 window ID and
window type are numeric.
The following new criteria tokens are now supported:
* id (X11 window ID)
* instance
* tiling
* workspace
This implements the title_format command, with a new placeholder %shell
which gets substituted with the view type (xwayland, xdg_shell_v6 or
wl_shell).
Example config:
for_window [title=".*"] title_format %title (class=%class instance=%instance shell=%shell)
Implements rendering of borders. Title text is still to do.
Implements the following configuration directives:
* client.focused
* client.focused_inactive
* client.unfocused
* client.urgent
* border
* default_border
Replaces arrange_windows() with arrange_root(), arrange_output(),
arrange_workspace() and arrange_children_of().
Also makes fullscreen views save and restore their dimensions, which
allows it to preserve any custom resize and is also a requirement for
floating views once they are implemented.
The exact semantics of this command are complicated. I'll describe each
test scenario as s-expressions. Everything assumes L_HORIZ if not
specified, but if you rotate everything 90 degrees the same test cases
hold.
```
(container (view a) (view b focus) (view c))
-> move left
(container (view b focus) (view a) (view c))
(container (view a) (view b focus) (view c))
-> move right
(container (view a) (view c) (view b focus))
(container L_VERT (view a))
(container L_HORIZ
(view b) (view c focus))
-> move up
(container L_VERT
(view a) (view c focus))
(container L_HORIZ (view b))
(workspace
(view a) (view b focus) (view c))
-> move up
(workspace [split direction flipped]
(view b focus)
(container (view a) (view c)))
(workspace
(view a) (view b focus) (view c))
-> move down
(workspace [split direction flipped]
(container (view a) (view c))
(view b focus)))
Note: outputs use wlr_output_layout instead of assuming that i+/-1 is
the next output in the move direction.
(root
(output X11-1
(workspace 1))
(output X11-2
(workspace 1 (view a focus) (view b)))))
-> move left
(root
(output X11-1
(workspace 1 (view a focus)))
(output X11-2
(workspace 1 (view b)))))
(root
(output X11-1
(workspace 1
(container (view a) (view b)))
(output X11-2
(workspace 1 (view c focus)))))
-> move left
(root
(output X11-1
(workspace 1
(container (view a) (view b))
(view c focus)))
(output X11-2
(workspace 1)))
```
Works:
- move [container|window] to workspace <name>
- Note, this should be able to move C_CONTAINER but this is untested
- move [workspace] to output [left|right|up|down|<name>]
Not implemented yet:
- move [left|right|up|down]
- move scratchpad
- move position
Also contains two other small changes:
- Clicking any button will focus the container clicked (not just left)
- Remove seamless_mouse (doesn't make sense on wlroots)
- Restore old one if we weren't part of a block (should be NULL anyway)
- Check current_input_config got properly allocated
- free temporary current_input_config when done using it
This commit implements the StatusNotifierItem protocol, and enables
swaybar to show tray icons. It also uses `xembedsniproxy` in order to
communicate with xembed applications.
The tray is completely optional, and can be disabled on compile time
with the `enable-tray` option. Or on runtime with the bar config option
`tray_output none`.
Overview of changes:
In swaybar very little is changed outside the tray subfolder except
that all events are now polled in `event_loop.c`, this creates no
functional difference.
Six bar configuration options were added, these are detailed in
sway-bar(5)
The tray subfolder is where all protocol implementation takes place and
is organised as follows:
tray/sni_watcher.c:
This file contains the StatusNotifierWatcher. It keeps track of
items and hosts and reports when they come or go.
tray/tray.c
This file contains the StatusNotifierHost. It keeps track of
sway's version of the items and represents the tray itself.
tray/sni.c
This file contains the StatusNotifierItem struct and all
communication with individual items.
tray/icon.c
This file implements the icon theme protocol. It allows for
finding icons by name, rather than by pixmap.
tray/dbus.c
This file allows for asynchronous DBus communication.
See #986#343
Increase _POSIX_SOURCE value where needed.
Increase _XOPEN_SOURCE value where needed.
Conditionally link to libcap (only on Linux).
Possibly some trailing whitespace fixes (automatic).
- When policies are allocated, the ipc target path goes
through symlink resolution. The result is used as
the canonical for matching pids to policies at runtime.
In particular, this matches up with the target of
the `/proc/<pid>/exe`.
- There's a possible race condition if this isn't done
correctly, read below.
Originally, validate_ipc_target() always tried to resolve
its argument for symlinks, and returned a parogram target string
if it validates. This created a possible race condition with
security implications. The problem is that get_feature_policy()
first independently resolved the policy target in order to check
whether a policy already exists. If it didn't find any, it called
alloc_feature_policy() which called validate_ipc_target() which
resolved the policy target again. In the time between the two
checks, the symlink could be altered, and a lucky attacker could
fool the program into thinking that a policy doesn't exist
for a target, and then switch the symlink to point at another file.
At the very least this could allow him to create two policies
for the same program target, and possibly to bypass security
by associating the permissions for one target with another,
or force default permissions to apply to a target for which
a more specific rule has been configured. So we don't that.
Instead, the policy target is resolved once and that result is
used for the rest of the lookup/creation process.
In i3 every mark is unique and one mark cannot be used in more than one
window, sway behavior has been amended to match this.
`swaymsg -t get_marks` will now return an array of all marks used in sway.
See #98
This commit changes how commands decide what container to act on.
Commands get the current container though `current_container`, a global
defined in sway/commands.c. If a criteria is given before a command,
then the following command will be run once for every container the
criteria matches with a reference to the matching container in
'current_container'. Commands should use this instead of
`get_focused_container()` from now on.
This commit also fixes a few (minor) mistakes made in implementing marks
such as non-escaped arrows in sway(5) and calling the "mark" command
"floating" by accident. It also cleans up `criteria.c` in a few places.
This commit adds three commands to sway: `show_marks`, `mark` and
`unmark`. Marks are displayed right-aligned in the window border as i3
does. Marks may be found using criteria.
Fixes#1007
As best I can tell this todo was intended to add workspace movement to
the given output with the `workspace <ws> output <op>` command, but i3
does not behave this way.