The major device number does not indicate the device type on FreeBSD,
and AFAIK the only way to differentiate between DRM, input, and other
devices is checking the fd path. This commit implements that.
The drmDropmaster and drmSetmaster calls are necessary, because the
implicit drop (that should occur when the DRM fd is closed) seems not
to be working in some scenarios (e.g. if you have a tmux session
running - maybe the fd is retained somehow by tmux?). This is a
problem, because once you exit the compositor, you can't start it (or
any other program that wants to be DRM master) again until you close
all your tmux sessions.
Layer surfaces are not notified of cursor position changes if the surface moves, only if the cursor moves. This workaround emits a cursor position event every time a cursor ends up over a newly resized layer surface to make sure the following clicks land in the right place.
This change doesn't address sending leave events when a cursor previously present over the surface becomes away.
There are 2 separate mechanisms in play, because a layer surface gets resized in 2 steps:
1. Layer surface resize & rearrange.
2. Underlying surface resize.
The first step may affect all layer surfaces. The cursor events are sent to cursors placed over all layer surfaces which have moved (not been resized). The second step affects any layer surface whose surface changed size. The cursor event is sent only to that surface.
Together, these events cover all surfaces: those which moves, and those which changed size, as long as each layer surface resize is accompanied by an immediate surface resize.
This is so we can potentially add comments to it, and so if a user looks
at the installed header, they can see the /* #undef WLR_HAS_FEATURE */
line to see every option, even if not available.
After destroying a keyboard input device, seat's listeners could still be pointing to destroyed wlr_input_device signals. This patch makes sure the references are removed while the input device is being destroyed.