This fixes the problem where animations will wait to play until input is
received. In general, it also makes the backend far more responsive.
Signed-off-by: Jason Ekstrand <jason@jlekstrand.net>
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=68221
On shutdown, we can risk having a pending vt switch that we normally
handle in the vt signal handler. However as we put the vt back in VT_AUTO
mode, the pending VT switch will go through and if we haven't dropped
drm master at that point, we could switch to another display server
without dropping drm master. That will typically crash the other server,
so let's try to make sure we don't do that.
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=70877
If the seat or tty doesn't match we return with r == 0, which looks like
success to weston_launcher_connect(), which then fails to fall back
to the legacy path.
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=70876
Otherwise we don't repaint with the final state of the surface and
we're stuck with the second-to-last frame of the animation until
something else (moving the mouse or such) triggers a redraw.
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=70930
get_animation_type() parses "none", "zoom" and "fade" but for the
startup animation, we only support "none" and "fade". If we get "zoom"
just fall back to "none" like we do for all unrecognized strings.
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=71006
We used to ungrab first to stop any existing grab and then grab after
showing the menu. That was broken in c680e90489, which
moved the ungrab down below the grab, and as a result menus are now
shown without a grab. This commit moves the grab back up.
A grab can potentially allocate memory and would normally end the grab
itself, freeing the allocated memory in the process. However at in some
situations the compositor may want to abort a grab. The grab owner still
needs to free some memory and abort the grab properly. To do this a new
function 'cancel' is introduced in all the grab interfaces instructing
the grabs owner to abort the grab.
This patch also hooks up grab cancelling to seat device releasing and
when the compositor looses focus, which would potentially leak memory
before.
Signed-off-by: Jonas Ådahl <jadahl@gmail.com>
We used to leak the input fds, as weston would reopen all fds on vt
enter. We could just close them after sending the open fd through the
socket, but this patch also adds support for the new EVIOCREVOKE evdev
ioctl, that revokes the fd in question (including the copy that we
sent to the compositor).
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=70849
Previously the renderers destroy function assumed they are only called
when the compositor is shutting down and that the compositor had
already destroyed all the surfaces. However, if a runtime renderer
switch would be done, the surface state would be leaked.
This patch adds a destroy_signal to the pixman and gl renderers. The
surface state objects will listen for that signal and destroy
themselves if needed.
This is a step towards runtime switchable renderers.
Remove create_surface() and destroy_surface() from the renderer
interface and change the renderers to create surface state on demand
and destroy it using the weston_surface's destroy signal.
Also make sure the surfaces' renderer state is reset to NULL on
destruction.
This is a step towards runtime switchable renderers.
(rpi-renderer changes are only compile-tested)
Also make sure backends destroy the renderers before shutting down the
compositor to avoid a double call to weston_binding_destroy().
This is a step towards making renderers switchable during runtime.
The compositor will check if the client destroyed the wl_buffer
while it was in use in a display update, and delete the resource
itself once the update has finished.
It was possible to start a move or resize with a pointer and then
start another move for the same surface with touch or a pointer from
another seat, which would make the window flicker around. With this
commit, we now reject any attempts to move or resize a surface that is
currently grabbed.
Most of the shell.c bindings take effect on the current pointer or
touch focus. That's now a view, but we need a surface in these cases.
Just get the surface from view->surface instead of trying to cast a
view to a surface.
setup_output_destroy_handler() deal with output created at
drm backend initialize time.
handle_output_create() deal with output created by hot plug handler
output_destroy_handler is removed when output was unplugged or
shell is destroyed.
Signed-off-by: Xiong Zhang <xiong.y.zhang@intel.com>
when output is removed, weston-desktop-shell should destroy panel
and background surface on destroyed output.
Signed-off-by: Xiong Zhang <xiong.y.zhang@intel.com>
In drm backend, the cursor_surface->plane point to
drm_output->cursor_plane.when this output is removed,
drm_output->cursor_plane is destroyed, butcursor_surface->plane
still point to destroyed plane. So once mouse move to this
cursor_surface and system will repaint this cursor_surface,
segment fault will generate in weston_surface_damage_below() function.
V2:
-set surface->plane to NULL whose plane point to unplugged output,
then change weston_surface_damage_below() to do nothing if
surface->plane is NULL (Kristian)
-set surface->plane to NULL in weston_surface_unmap(),
so that all surfaces that have a non-NULL plane pointer wil be
on compositor->surface_list (Kristian).
bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=69777
Signed-off-by: Xiong Zhang <xiong.y.zhang@intel.com>
We don't have a reliable way to know when to clear this indicator.
Typically the pointer will still be over the window when the resize is
done and we'll get an enter event, but if the window sets a max size
the pointer may be over another window when the resize is done.
We'll need a new wl_shell (or more likely xdg_shell) event for this.