Without this change, weston would crash whenever a nil buffer was
passed to input_device_attach() if the cursor sprite was not mapped.
While at it, change the unmapping code to use weston_surface_unmap().
Function weston_load_image() was deleted in f02a649a but the wayland
backend was not adapted to the new interface. This probably went
unoticed because the prototype for the missing function was not deleted
from compositor.h so the backend would compile without warnings.
The configure default is to setuid root the weston compositor.
However, if installing as non-root (say, to your prefix in homedir),
the install fails anyway, even if you didn't need setuid to run weston
in your configuration.
On one hand, getopt (in particular the -o suboption syntax) sucks on the
server side, and on the client side we would like to avoid the glib
dependency. We can roll out own option parser and solve both problems
and save a few lines of code total.
Udev provides a convenient helper. Use it instead of working with the
property-list directly.
Signed-off-by: David Herrmann <dh.herrmann@googlemail.com>
If we have multiple video devices on the system (card0, card1), we should
ignore hotplug events for cards that we do not use. This avoids calling
update_outputs() if the event was not generated by our device so we avoid
refreshing the DRM information if it didn't change.
Signed-off-by: David Herrmann <dh.herrmann@googlemail.com>
When creating outputs in the drm compositor, if allocating crtcs
fails, then free the drm resources. Also, if the base output list is
empty, free drm resources
If map is called with a surface of type none it will call
weston_surface_assign_output, even though the surface will
not be mapped.
This change was lost with the changes for using wl_layers.
This can happen for instance running a toytoolkit application, launching
the popup menu and then clicking on a surface that does not belong to
the client that create the popup surface.
When a client with fullscreen surface displayed was aborted by Ctrl-C, the
black surface still be there. Destroy the black surface in
destroy_shell_surface().
When we're repainting, there's no point in polling for input events.
We just read input events once before each repaint and send out events
as needed. The input events come with an accurate timestamp, so this
doesn't affect the timing information and client should always look at
the event timestamps if they're trying to determine pointer motion
speed or double click speed. If we go idle (stop repainting) we add the
input devices back into the primary main loop and wait for the next event.
This avoids waking up the compositor separately (one or more times per
frame) to handle input events. We also avoid updating cursor position
and other compositor state after the client has rendered its new
frame, reducing lag between what the client renders and the pointer
position.
This can happen for instance if the client that started the drag
crashes. Weston would crash because of the invalid surface pointed by
device->drag_surface.
Fix this by reseting the drag surface to nil on a destroy listener.
The surface data structure is now a list of list of surfaces. The core
compositor defines the fade and cursor layer, and it's up to the shell to
provide more layers for the various surface types it implements.
We can now clip the surface bounding box against the previous frame
opaque clip, and then just union the result (visible damage) into
compositor->damage immediately.
Undo fullscreen in shell_unset_fullscreen(), do all the stacking order
in shell_stack_fullscreen(), and configure black surface, method in
shell_configure_fullscreen().
Signed-off-by: Alex Wu <zhiwen.wu@linux.intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Juan Zhao <juan.j.zhao@linux.intel.com>
Undo fullscreen in shell_unset_fullscreen(), do all the stacking order
in shell_stack_fullscreen(), and configure black surface, method in
shell_configure_fullscreen().
Signed-off-by: Alex Wu <zhiwen.wu@linux.intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Juan Zhao <juan.j.zhao@linux.intel.com>
libbacklight is 300 lines of code in one .c file, and we're relying on
udev changes that aren't yet upstream. For now, let's just keep a
copy in weston and if the Xorg DDX drivers start using libbacklight and
it becomes more widely available, we'll make it an external dependency.
DPMS kicks in only when wscreensaver is launched, in the moment that shell
call lock() for the second time. Backlight control internals are managed by
libbacklight:
http://cgit.freedesktop.org/~vignatti/libbacklight/
Signed-off-by: Tiago Vignatti <tiago.vignatti@intel.com>