When the last output is disconnected, output_disable is called like
usual and evacuates the output to the root->saved_workspaces list. It
then calls root_for_each_container to remove (untrack) the output from
each container's outputs list. However root_for_each_container did not
iterate the saved workspaces, so when the output gets freed the
containers would have a dangling pointer in their outputs list. Upon
reconnect, container_discover_outputs would attempt to use the dangling
pointer, causing a crash.
This makes root_for_each_container check the saved workspaces list,
which fixes the problem.
This changes it back so the path given to swaybg is enclosed in quotes.
Additionally, the only character that is escaped in the path stored is
double quotes now. This makes it so we don't need to keep an exhaustive
list of characters that need to be escaped.
The end user will still need to escape these characters in their config
or when passed to swaybg.
This changes our gaps implementation to behave like i3-gaps.
Our previous implementation allowed you to set gaps on a per container
basis. This isn't supported by i3-gaps and doesn't seem to have a
practical use case. The gaps_outer and gaps_inner properties on
containers are now removed as they just read the gaps_inner from the
workspace.
`gaps inner|outer <px>` no longer changes the gaps for all workspaces.
It only sets defaults for new workspaces.
`gaps inner|outer current|workspace|all set|plus|minus <px>` is now
runtime only, and the workspace option is now removed. `current` now
sets gaps for the current workspace as opposed to the current container.
`workspace <ws> gaps inner|outer <px>` is now implemented. This sets
defaults for a workspace.
This also fixes a bug where changing the layout of a split container
from linear to tabbed would cause gaps to not be applied to it until you
switch to another workspace and back.
When we eventually implement `workspace <ws> gaps inner|outer <px>`,
we'll need to store the gaps settings for workspaces before they're
created. Rather than create a workspace_gaps struct, the approach I'm
taking is to rename workspace_outputs to workspace_configs and then add
gaps settings to that.
I've added a lookup function workspace_find_config. Note that we have a
similar thing for outputs (output_config struct and output_find_config).
Lastly, when freeing config it would create a memory leak by freeing the
list items but not the workspace or output names inside them. This has
been rectified using a free_workspace_config function.
This involves setuid'ing swaylock, which then forks and drops perms on
the parent process. The child process remains root and listens on a pipe
for requests to validate passwords against /etc/shadow.
view_is_visible would return false, which meant the view wouldn't
receive a frame done event. view_is_visible needs to make an exception
for floating containers.
This also moves the workspace_is_visible check to an earlier location
for performance reasons.
This does the following:
* Removes the xdg-decoration surface_commit listener. I was under the
impression the client could ignore the server's preference and set
whatever decoration they like using this protocol, but I don't think
that's right.
* Adds a listener for the xdg-decoration request_mode signal. The
protocol states that the server should respond to this with its
preference. We'll always respond with SSD here.
* Makes it so tiled views which use CSD will still have sway decorations
rendered. To do this, using_csd had to be added back to the view struct,
and the border is changed when floating or unfloating a view.
This replaces view.using_csd with a new border mode: B_CSD. This also
removes sway_xdg_shell{_v6}_view.deco_mode and
view->has_client_side_decorations as we can now get these from the
border.
You can use `border toggle` to cycle through the modes including CSD, or
use `border csd` to set it directly. The client must support the
xdg-decoration protocol, and the only client I know of that does is the
example in wlroots.
If the client switches from SSD to CSD without us expecting it (via the
server-decoration protocol), we stash the previous border type into
view.saved_border so we can restore it if the client returns to SSD. I
haven't found a way to test this though.
This commit fixes a segfault in swaybar on FreeBSD that was caused by
using getdelim with EOF as delimiter on an infinite stream. The FreeBSD
implementation handles the "no more data, delimiter not found, and EOF
not reached" scenario as an error, so it can't be used to read the
output of status command. This commit replaces the getline/getdelim
calls with reading all available data from the stream in one go.
This commit replaces the non-standard SOCK_NONBLOCK and SOCK_CLOEXEC
flags with two fcntl calls. This makes the file POSIX 2001 compliant,
thus it is no longer necessary to conditionally define, or use internal
(__BSD_VISIBLE) feature test macros.