When interactively resizing some views (eg. Nautilus), new transactions
are added to the queue faster than the client can process them.
Previously, we would wait for the entire queue to be ready before
applying any of them, but in this case the transactions would time out,
giving the client choppy performance.
This changes the queue handling so it applies the transactions up to the
first waiting transaction, without waiting for the entire queue to be
ready.
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.
This removes the urgency stuff from the commit handler and puts it in a
new set_hints handler instead. This allows the xwayland surface to
become urgent without having to commit (which doesn't happen if it's on
an non-visible workspace).
Fixes#2303, as well as a crash.
To replicate the crash:
* Have multiple outputs
* In config: for_window [<criteria>] workspace foo
* Also in config: workspace foo output <left-output-name>
* Focus the right output, and ensure workspace foo doesn't exist
* Launch the app that triggers the criteria
When the view maps, it calls workspace_switch which calls
send_set_focus which calls cursor_send_pointer_motion which calls
transaction_commit_dirty. This call to transaction_commit_dirty is not
meant to happen at this time because the tree isn't guaranteed to be in
a consistent state, but I'm not sure how exactly this leads to the crash
or render issues.
In this case the transaction is already committed by the view
implementation's handle_map function. So the solution is to remove it
from cursor_send_pointer_motion and add it to the other functions in
cursor.c which call cursor_send_pointer_motion.
This allows to send wl_pointer.enter when switching between views
in a split/tabbed layout for instance. This (1) updates the cursor
image accordingly (2) makes it unnecessary to move the mouse before
scrolling. It's harmless to always call cursor_send_pointer_motion
because in case the focused surface hasn't changed this is a no-op.
The `last_focus != NULL` condition is required otherwise
cursor_send_pointer_motion will crash when sway starts up (the
sway_output doesn't yet have a workspace).
When an xwayland view is mapped, the IPC urgent event was being sent on
every surface commit.
I had intentionally ommitted the check because I figured an urgent
surface could update its urgent timestamp by sending urgent a second
time. But that's not how it works in xwayland's case, and it makes for
more complicated code.
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.
Rather than maintain copies of the entire focus stack, this PR
transactionises the focus by introducing two new properties to the
container state and using those when rendering.
* `bool focused` means this container has actual focus. Only one
container should have this equalling true in its current state.
* `struct sway_container *focus_inactive_child` points to the immediate
child that was most recently focused (eg. for tabbed and stacked
containers).
We currently have several ways of setting debug flags, including command
line arguments, environment variables, and compile-time macros. This
replaces the lot with command line flags.
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.
Now the scroll_button will not accept:
- letters on string beginning;
- negative numbers.
What is tolerated:
- letters after number;
- rational numbers: the fraction after dot will be omitted.
This commit introduces a scroll_button option, which is intended to be
used with scroll_method. Now user can edit his sway config and add an
scroll_button option to device section.
The title and marks textures would have their height set from the
config's computed max font height, but the textures were not regenerated
when the config's max font height changed which made a gap appear.
Rather than making it regenerate the title textures every time the
config font height was changed, I've changed it to just make the
textures the height of the title itself and fill any gap when rendering.
Also, the title_width and marks_width variables have been renamed to
make it more obvious that they are in output-buffer-local coordinates.
Fixes#1936.
The only user of this function would copy the string right away
to get rid of the const flag anyway, and freeing a const string
afterwards might work but is not meant to be done according to the
json-c API.
If we set an instruction as ready twice, it decreases the transaction's
num_waiting a second time and applies the transaction earlier than it
should. This no doubt has undesired effects, probably resulting in a use
after free.
Hopefully fixes the first part of #2207.
wl_event_source_remove() is illegal after display has been destroyed,
so just destroy everything when we still can.
==20392==ERROR: AddressSanitizer: heap-use-after-free on address 0x607000001240 at pc 0x00000048e86e bp 0x7ffe4b557e00 sp 0x7ffe4b557df0
READ of size 8 at 0x607000001240 thread T0
#0 0x48e86d in wl_list_insert ../common/list.c:149
#1 0x7fdf673d4d7d in wl_event_source_remove src/event-loop.c:487
#2 0x41b742 in ipc_terminate ../sway/ipc-server.c:94
#3 0x40b1ad in main ../sway/main.c:440
#4 0x7fdf6664c18a in __libc_start_main ../csu/libc-start.c:308
#5 0x409359 in _start (/opt/wayland/bin/sway+0x409359)
0x607000001240 is located 48 bytes inside of 72-byte region [0x607000001210,0x607000001258)
freed by thread T0 here:
#0 0x7fdf692c4880 in __interceptor_free (/lib64/libasan.so.5+0xee880)
#1 0x7fdf673d371a in wl_display_destroy src/wayland-server.c:1097
previously allocated by thread T0 here:
#0 0x7fdf692c4c48 in malloc (/lib64/libasan.so.5+0xeec48)
#1 0x7fdf673d4d9e in wl_event_loop_create src/event-loop.c:522
#2 0x40acb2 in main ../sway/main.c:363
#3 0x7fdf6664c18a in __libc_start_main ../csu/libc-start.c:308
When you have an unfocused container (so one view is focused_inactive),
and you focus any other view in that container, the view with
focused_inactive was not damaged. This is because we damaged the
previous focus and new focus, but needed to damage the parent of the new
focus.
We would previously run all config commands without the environment,
which would appear to work as our socket name is the default one, but
wayland clients would start up in the wrong sway session.
(This explains why 'sometimes' my swayidle processes wouldn't die with
sway, as they weren't listening to the correct socket)
Fixes#2192.
seat_get_active_current_child is intended to return a child of the given
container which has finished its mapping transaction and is able to be
rendered on screen. The previous implementation was capable of returning
a pending child, which caused a child of a tabbed or stacked view to be
rendered prematurely while it was mapping.