Also fixes a crash when unfloating a window. It needs to add it back to
the tiling tree as a sibling rather than a child, because the reference
container might be a view.
This introduces seat_get_focus_inactive_tiling and updates
`focus mode_toggle` to use it instead, because the previous method
wasn't guaranteed to return a tiling view.
Things worth noting:
* When a fullscreen view unmaps, the check to unset fullscreen on the
workspace has been moved out of view_unmap and into container_destroy,
because containers can be fullscreen too
* The calls to `container_reap_empty_recursive(workspace)` have been
removed from `container_set_floating`. That function reaps upwards so it
wouldn't do anything. I'm probably the one who originally added it...
* My fix (b14bd1b0b1) for the tabbed child
crash has a side effect where when you close a floating container, focus
is not given to the tiled container again. I've removed my fix and
removed the call to `send_cursor_motion` from `seat_set_focus_warp`. We
should consider calling it from somewhere earlier in the call stack.
The mouse binding logic is inspired/copied from the
keyboard binding logic; we store a sorted list of the
currently pressed buttons, and trigger a binding when
the currently pressed (or just recently pressed, in
the case of a release binding) buttons, as well as
modifiers/container region, match those of a given
binding.
As the code to execute a binding is not very keyboard
specific, keyboard_execute_command is renamed to
seat_execute_command and moved to where the other
binding handling functions are. The call to
transaction_commit_dirty has been lifted out.
First, the existing sway_binding structure is given an
enumerated type code. As all flags to bindsym/bindcode
are boolean, a single uint32 is used to hold all flags.
The _BORDER, _CONTENTS, _TITLEBAR flags, when active,
indicate in which part of a container the binding can
trigger; to localize complexity, they do not overlap
with the command line arguments, which center around
_TITLEBAR being set by default.
The keyboard handling code is adjusted for this change,
as is binding_key_compare; note that BINDING_LOCKED
is *not* part of the key portion of the binding.
Next, list of mouse bindings is introduced and cleaned up.
Finally, the binding command parsing code is extended
to handle the case where bindsym is used to describe
a mouse binding rather than a keysym binding; the
difference between the two may be detected as late as
when the first key/button is parsed, or as early as
the first flag. As bindings can have multiple
keycodes/keysyms/buttons, mixed keysym/button sequences
are prohibited.
Implements the following commands:
* move scratchpad
* scratchpad show
* [criteria] scratchpad show
Also fixes these:
* Fix memory leak when executing command with criteria
(use `list_free(views)` instead of `free(views)`)
* Fix crash when running `move to` with no further arguments
This implements the following:
* `floating_modifier` configuration directive
* Drag a floating window by its title bar
* Hold mod + drag a floating window from anywhere
* Resize a floating view by dragging the border
* Resize a floating view by holding mod and right clicking anywhere on
the view
* Resize a floating view and keep aspect ratio by holding shift while
resizing using either method
* Mouse cursor turns into resize when hovering floating border or corner
The directive sets the timeout before an urgent view becomes normal
again after switching to it from another workspace.
Also:
* When an xwayland surface removes the urgent hint while the timer is
active, we now ignore the request. This happens as soon as the view
receives focus, so it was effectively making the timer pointless.
* The timeout is now only applied when switching to it from another
workspace.
Introduces a command to manually set urgency, as well as rendering of
urgent views, sending the IPC event, removing urgency after focused for
one second, and matching urgent views via criteria.
This PR changes the way we handle transactions to a more simple method.
The new method is to mark containers as dirty from low level code
(eg. arranging, or container_destroy, and eventually seat_set_focus),
then call transaction_commit_dirty which picks up those containers and
runs them through a transaction. The old methods of using transactions
(arrange_and_commit, or creating one manually) are now no longer
possible.
The highest-level code (execute_command and view implementation
handlers) will call transaction_commit_dirty, so most other code just
needs to set containers as dirty. This is done by arranging, but can
also be done by calling container_set_dirty.