Adding support for the keyboard shortcuts inhibit protocol allows remote
desktop and virtualisation software to receive all keyboard input in
order to pass it through to their clients so users can fully interact
the their remote/virtual session. The software usually provides its own
key combination to release its "grab" to all keyboard input. The
inhibitor can be deactivated by the user by removing focus from the
surface using another input device such as the pointer.
Use support for the procotol in wlroots to add support to sway. Extend
the input manager with handlers for inhibitor creation and destruction
and appropriate bookkeeping. Attach the inhibitors to the seats they
apply to to avoid having to search the list of all currently existing
inhibitors on every keystroke and passing the inhibitor manager around.
Add a helper function to retrieve the inhibitor applying to the
currently focused surface of a seat, if one exists.
Extend bindsym with a flag for bindings that should be processed even if
an inhibitor is active. Conversely this disables all normal shortcuts if
an inhibitor is found for the currently focused surface in
keyboard::handle_key_event() since they don't have that flag set. Use
above helper function to determine if an inhibitor exists for the
surface that would eventually receive input.
Signed-off-by: Michael Weiser <michael.weiser@gmx.de>
This fixes a crash when attempting to listen to a signal on a NULL
cursor image surface. If the surface is NULL, the listener is just
reinitialized using wl_list_init.
This adds a listener for the destroy event of the cursor image surface.
This prevents a use-after-free when the last visible image surface is
freed, there has not been a new cursor set, and the cursor is reshown.
This removes `seat <seat> keyboard_grouping keymap` and replaces it with
`seat <seat> keyboard_grouping smart`. The smart keyboard grouping will
group based on both the keymap and repeat info. The reasoning for this
is that deciding what the repeat info should be for a group is either
arbitrary or non-deterministic when multiple keyboards in the group have
repeat info configured (unless somehow exposed to the user in a
reproducible uniquely identifiable fashion).
When clicking on the titlebar of a floating container (or descendant of
a floating container), the top-level floating container was being
focused and then allowing you to move the top-level floating container.
This made it so you couldn't switch to a different tab/stack within the
floating container. With this patch, the focus inactive view for the
container that the titlebar is associated with is focused, then the
traversal to the top-level floating container is performed to use with
the move floating operation.
This defers the destruction of wlr_keyboard_groups until idle. This is
to prevent the keyboard group's keyboard from being destroyed in the
middle of handling a keyboard event. This would occur when changing the
keymap of the last keyboard in a group with a keyboard binding. The
prevents crashing when attempting to update the xkb state of the
keyboard group's keyboard. The sway_keyboard_group is still immediately
destroyed so that the group is no longer used
This adds two missing calls to wl_list_remove to remove the key and
modifier listeners for the keyboard group's keyboard when destroying
the keyboard group. This fixes some crashes when changing the keymap of
the last keyboard in a group with a keyboard binding.
This adds seat configuration options which can be used to configure what
events affect the idle behavior of sway.
An example use-case is mobile devices: you would remove touch from the
list of idle_wake events. This allows the phone to stay on while you're
actively using it, but doesn't wake from idle on touch events while it's
sleeping in your pocket.
Some wayland clients (mostly GTK3 apps) like eog or evince support
gestures like pinch-to-zoom. These gestures are given to clients
via the pointer_gestures_v1 protocol. This is already supported in
wlroots, so we just need to hook up the events here in sway.
Fixes#4724
If a sway keyboard is being destroyed, then the keyboard is being
removed from a seat. If the associated wlr_keyboard is the currently
set keyboard for the wlr_seat, then we need to reset the wlr_seat's
keyboard to NULL so it doesn't reference an invalid device for the seat.
The next configured keyboard from the seat or the next keyboard from
that seat that has an event will then become the seat keyboard.
Similarly, this needs to be done for a wlr_keyboard_group's keyboard
when the wlr_keyboard_group is being destroyed.
For the validation pass of reloading, there is no need to touch swaybg,
swaynag, inputs, outputs, or seats. This drastically improves the speed
of a reload by skipping over the expensive I/O configuration and
handling of wayland clients. As long as the syntax is valid, the
CMD_FAILURE's can be relayed during the actual reload.
In sway_keyboard_destroy, only remove the keyboard from a keyboard
group, if it is part of a keyboard group. If the keyboard is not part of
a keyboard group, then there is nothing to remove it from
When being created, non first seats would get through the list of devices
without the list being first initialised -> segfault.
Issue introduced with ab0248a545Fixes#4750: Crash when reloading Sway with multiple seats configured
A wlr_keyboard_group allows for multiple keyboard devices to be
combined into one logical keyboard. This is useful for keyboards that
are split into multiple input devices despite appearing as one physical
keyboard in the user's mind.
This adds support for wlr_keyboard_groups to sway. There are two
keyboard groupings currently supported, which can be set on a per-seat
basis. The first keyboard grouping is none, which disables all grouping
and provides no functional change. The second is keymap, which groups
the keyboard devices in the seat by their keymap. With this grouping,
the effective layout and repeat info is also synced across keyboard
devices in the seat. Device specific bindings will still be executed as
normal, but everything else related to key and modifier events will be
handled by the keyboard group's keyboard.
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.
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 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.
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.
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
This just adds a small quality of life improvement to the cursor hiding
functionality. The cursor will no longer be hidden unless all buttons
are released.
This adds support for specifying a binding for a specific group. Any
binding without a group listed will be available in all groups. The
priority for matching bindings is as follows: input device, group, and
locked state.
For full compatibility with i3, this also adds Mode_switch as an alias
for Group2. Since i3 only supports this for backwards compatibility
with older versions of i3, it is implemented here, but not documented.
In sway_keyboard_config, do not change the keymap when the new keymap
is unchanged, unless this is during a config reload. The reasoning for
this is to prevent the effective layout from being reset to index 0 for
input config changes unrelated to the keymap.
This just fixes the check in set_send_events for whether the mode has
changed. LIBINPUT_CONFIG_SEND_EVENTS_ENABLED is 0 so the bitmask check
cannot be fixed, but Sway doesn't allow multiple modes to be set anyway
(not really sure why you would need to) so a basic equality check works
This adds a libinput_config change type to the input event for when
the libinput config for a device changes
In order for this to be possible to track, the libinput config code
had to be refactored. It is now extracted into a separate file to
isolate it from the rest of the input management code.
This adds an ipc event related to input devices. Currently the
following changes are supported:
- added: when an input device becomes available
- removed: when an input device is no longer available
- xkb_keymap_changed: (keyboards only) the keymap changed
- xkb_layout_changed: (keyboards only) the effective layout changed
Adds a new commend "xkb_file", which constructs the internal
xkb_keymap from a xkb file rather than an RMLVO configuration.
This allows greater flexibility when specifying xkb configurations.
An xkb file can be dumped with the xkbcomp program.
Instead of using container->width/height as both the input and output
of the layout calculation have container->width_fraction/height_fraction
as the share of the parent this container occupies and calculate the
layout based on that. That way the container arrangement can always be
recalculated even if width/height have been altered by things like
fullscreen.
To do this several parts are reworked:
- The vertical and horizontal arrangement code is ajusted to work with
fractions instead of directly with width/height
- The resize code is then changed to manipulate the fractions when
working on tiled containers.
- Finally the places that manipulated width/height are adjusted to
match. The adjusted parts are container split, swap, and the input
seat code.
It's possible that some parts of the code are now adjusting width and
height only for those to be immediately recalculated. That's harmless
and since non-tiled containers are still sized with width/height
directly it may avoid breaking other corner cases.
Fixes#3547Fixes#4297
This adds checks to the input_manager_libinput_reset_* functions to
only attempt resetting supported options on reload. This should have no
functional difference to the user, but will remove several `Failed to
apply libinput config: Unsupported configuration option` lines from the
log that can be noisy and potential red herrings.