Emilio Pozuelo Monfort 9e7c7598aa desktop-shell: Properly handle lowered fullscreen surfaces
lower_fullscreen_surface() was removing fullscreen surfaces from
the fullscreen layer and inserting them in the normal workspace
layer. However, those fullscreen surfaces were never put back in
the fullscreen layer, causing bugs such as unrelated surfaces
being drawn between a fullscreen surface and its black view.

Change the lower_fullscreen_surface() logic so that it lowers
fullscreen surfaces to the workspace layer *and* hides the
black views. Make this reversible by re-configuring the lowered
fullscreen surface: when it is re-configured, the black view
will be shown again and the surface will be restacked in the
fullscreen layer.

https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=73575
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=74221
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=74222
2014-04-29 16:33:56 -07:00
2014-03-10 13:29:40 -07:00
2014-04-10 11:59:30 -07:00
2014-04-16 22:31:44 -07:00
2014-02-07 14:53:31 -08:00
2010-11-06 21:04:03 -04:00
2012-04-25 10:17:42 -04:00
2014-04-06 22:32:24 -07:00
2012-10-25 15:00:42 -04:00

Weston

Weston is the reference implementation of a Wayland compositor, and a
useful compositor in its own right.  Weston has various backends that
lets it run on Linux kernel modesetting and evdev input as well as
under X11.  Weston ships with a few example clients, from simple
clients that demonstrate certain aspects of the protocol to more
complete clients and a simplistic toolkit.  There is also a quite
capable terminal emulator (weston-terminal) and an toy/example desktop
shell.  Finally, weston also provides integration with the Xorg server
and can pull X clients into the Wayland desktop and act as a X window
manager.

Refer to http://wayland.freedesktop.org/building.html for building
weston and its dependencies.

The test suite can be invoked via `make check`; see
http://wayland.freedesktop.org/testing.html for additional details.
S
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