set_window_id is the one responsible for mapping the window and the shell will
decide whether a surface needs to be activated or not. But not always at
MapNotify. That was causing ugly behavior on non-toplevel windows.
Signed-off-by: Tiago Vignatti <tiago.vignatti@intel.com>
Although resource will be valid when it is used since the entered and left
masks are subsets of the different mask it would be nice not to have a
spurious compiler warning.
Touchpad related code has been rewritten and moved to its own file
accessed by evdev via the dispatch interface.
The various functionality implemented are anti-jitter (don't jumping
around), smoother motions, touch detection, pointer acceleration and
some more.
Pointer acceleration is implemented as one generic part, and one touch
specific part (a profile).
Some ideas and magic numbers comes from xserver and
xf86-input-synaptics.
Signed-off-by: Jonas Ådahl <jadahl@gmail.com>
By setting an 'evdev_dispatch' struct in 'evdev_input_device' during
device configuration the 'process' function in the associated interface
will be called with received input events. If none is set, a fallback
handler will be set instead that handle generic input functionality.
Signed-off-by: Jonas Ådahl <jadahl@gmail.com>
This lets us mark a rectangle in a texture and force the alpha to one
inside. This is useful for textures coming from X windows, where the X
window part is xRGB, that is 32 bit RGB with an undefined alpha channel
and the decorations are rendered with a well-defined alpha channel.
wl_input_device has been both renamed and split. wl_seat is now a
virtual object representing a group of logically related input devices
with related focus.
It now only generates one event: to let clients know that it has new
capabilities. It takes requests which hand back objects for the
wl_pointer, wl_keyboard and wl_touch interfaces it exposes which all
provide the old input interface, just under different names.
This commit tracks these changes in weston and the clients, as well as
similar renames (e.g. weston_input_device -> weston_seat). Some other
changes were necessary, e.g. renaming the name for the visible mouse
sprite from 'pointer' to 'cursor' so as to not conflict.
For simplicity, every seat is always exposed with all three interfaces,
although this will change as time goes on.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Stone <daniel@fooishbar.org>
Using the surface enter/leave events track which outputs the window is on and
store those in a "window_output_list" on the window.
To create this list we define a struct window_output that is the list
relationship between the window and the output.
The type of fields x and y in wl_input_device was changed to wl_fixed_t
but input_device_attach() was still using it as if it were integer.
This bug caused the pointer sprite to be configured in the wrong place
on the screen (usually outside the visible area) but it would soon be
corrected in notify_motion() making it hard to notice and usually only
causing a quick flicker.
If a client changes it's width/height values in it's widget resize handler,
the input region will be wrong because of the assumptions toytoolkit makes
in frame_resize_handler(). So far, gears is the only client that does this.