The break statement wasn't copy and pasted along with the rest of the code
causing menu item before it ("Move to workspace below") to fall through to
the fullscreen case.
In order to use XKB capabilities (as we do), the client must issue an
XkbUseExtension request:
http://www.x.org/releases/current/doc/kbproto/xkbproto.html#Initializing_the_X_Keyboard_Extension
The reason this succeeds currently is that XOpenDisplay from Xlib does
this for us. But it is better not to rely on that, but do it explicitly
in XCB with the rest of the XKB init sequence.
Signed-off-by: Ran Benita <ran234@gmail.com>
Where we don't look at the error details, pass NULL to the 'error'
argument and test using the reply return value instead.
Where we do need it, remember to free it.
Signed-off-by: Ran Benita <ran234@gmail.com>
Pressing ctrl-alt-o will cause the overlays to be hidden, but surfaces
will still be assigned to different planes. This helps with debugging
of repaint culling below surfaces in other planes.
Culling of the repaint of a surface behind an opaque surface on the
same plane was broken by commit 547149a9 [1]. The idea of that commit
is that the damage obscured by an overlay would remain on the primary
plane damage and be repainted when the overlay moved. However, in the
case the two surfaces are on the same plane, the opaque one is not
obscured, so it ends up being repainted.
This commit adds an opaque field to struct weston_plane, that is built
incrementally when accumulating damage. The opaque region of surfaces
on the same plane are removed from the plane's damage, restoring the
previous culling behavior. But since damage behind opaque region of
other planes is maintained, the bug solved in the mentioned commit is
not regressed.
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=56537
In order to use xcb_request_check(), given a request without a reply,
you need to use the _checked() variant of the request function.
See xcb-requests(3).
Signed-off-by: Ran Benita <ran234@gmail.com>
We need to clamp or center on a per axis basis. If the window is wider
but the image is taller, we need to center horizontally but
clamp vertically. We can only do that if by combining the two
functions.
Clicking outside popups closes them except in case of a shell grab
(move, resize or rotate), in which case we move the parent window away
from under the popup. Instead, just end the popup in those cases.
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=55674
Partial repaints have been broken since the introduction of the atomic
surface updates. The problem was that surface_commit would set the
geometry dirty flag unconditionally, causing transform updates on every
frame which would in turn cause weston_surface_damage_below() to damage
the whole surface area.
This patch changes this so that flag is only set if the pending buffer
has a different size, the location of the surface changed or the opaque
region changed.
Note that changing the opaque region will cause a full repaint of the
affected surface, because of the transform update.
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=56538
The intended behavior is that a quick click (press and then release
within 500ms) just pops up the menu and doesn't select anything. Then
we can mouse around and and click to select an item. Alternatively, a
click and hold (ie press and release after 500ms) lets you press right
button, mouse down on the menu item you want and release to select it.
This is how menus work in most toolkits.
The handling in weston is fine, it's there to handle the case where
the button release happens outside any client window, since the client
doesn't get those events. If such a release happens late or we get a
second release outside the popup window we shut down the popup.
The problem is in toytoolkit, where we need to select the item if we
get a release within 500ms or if we get a second release. A second
release is the case where the first release came after 500ms and
didn't pop down the menu, and the second release event is from a click
on a menu item.
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=52456
If clients don't set a cursor, they get whatever the last cursor was
before the pointer entered their window. That's a little confusing, so
set a pointer on enter to avoid that. The down-side is that simple EGL
isn't very simple anymore.
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=52452
If we can find a boot_vga PCI GPU, we should prefer it over any other GPU
that is connected to the system. The boot_vga flag tells us that this GPU
is the primary system GPU.
This fixes problems on two-GPU-systems were the wrong GPU is used. It also
fixes systems were DisplayLink GPUs are available with lower IDs than PCI
GPUs (although, this seems unlikely).
Note that udev_enumerate guarantees that the entry-list is sorted. So for
systems that have platform-GPUs, these should almost always be reported
prior to hotpluggable (PCI, USB, ...) GPUs, as the kernel probes them
first.
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=56237
Signed-off-by: David Herrmann <dh.herrmann@googlemail.com>
By request on the wayland-devel mailing list, we could start collecting
useful writings here.
However, this is not meant to be a substitute to proper documentation,
though I understand it may very well become one. Better than nothing, I
guess, and hopefully helps in writing real documentation.
Feel free to add stuff.
Signed-off-by: Pekka Paalanen <ppaalanen@gmail.com>
This comment became stale in:
commit 65a11e1039
Author: Kristian Høgsberg <krh@bitplanet.net>
Date: Fri Aug 3 11:30:18 2012 -0400
compositor: Accumulate damage per plane
Now it is just misleading. Remove it.
Signed-off-by: Pekka Paalanen <ppaalanen@gmail.com>
Toytoolkit does not support setting opaqueness for anything else than
the immediate child widget of the frame widget. Backgrounds do not have
frames, so we need to poke it in manually.
This should allow Weston to paint the background without blending.
Signed-off-by: Pekka Paalanen <ppaalanen@gmail.com>
If the bind fails, do not bother pretending the EGL Wayland extension
is usable, and no need to unbind, either.
Print some important details about the GLESv2 renderer configuration
into the log.
Signed-off-by: Pekka Paalanen <ppaalanen@gmail.com>
When tiling window managers resize a non-resizable window they're violating
ICCCM. Not some hippie-community standard like EWMH, but ICCCM, which is
about as old and sacred as the constitution. If they want to force a window
to be a size it wasn't designed for, at least they could have the decency to
reparent the client window into a bigger containing window of whatever size
they think it should be. But apparently ICCCM compliance is too much to ask.
Anyway, all that just to say that it's really not our fault when we get an
enter event with coordinates outside the valid output region. But we'll
clip it anyway and work around mis-behaving tiling WMs.
Since the send-button-state request comes in on one socket and the
wayland event we're looking for comes in on another socket, the order
that we process the two in is undefined. Thus, button-test fails
intermittently, depending on which event we process first.
We change wl_display_flush() to wl_display_roundtrip(), to make sure that
we deal with all wayland events before handling test protocol requests.
Grabbed widgets should always receive motion events as if it was the
widget that would receive it if no grab was active. This means that the
focused widget should always be passed as the widget argument to widget
motion handlers.
This reverts commit 8c9c8fcf6e.
Signed-off-by: Jonas Ådahl <jadahl@gmail.com>
The simple clients all just call wl_display_dispatch() in a while loop
without checking the return value. Now, if the server dies or other
error occurs, we get a -1 return value instead and need to break the loop.