This fixes a race condition flicker when unfloating a view which uses
client side decorations.
When the view is floated it has using_csd = true, so the decorations are
not drawn. When unfloating it it changes to false, but this change
wasn't part of transactions so it could potentially render the
decorations around the view while it's waiting for the transaction to
apply.
Fixes#2467.
This commit introduces seat_get_focus_inactive_floating to supplement
seat_get_focus_inactive_tiling, and uses it during `focus mode_toggle`
which fixes a focus bug.
This also refactors the seat_get_focus_inactive functions so that they
do their selection logic themselves rather than offloading it to
seat_get_focus_by_type which was getting bloated. seat_get_focus_by_type
is now removed.
Lastly, this commit changes seat_get_focus to just return the first
container in the focus stack rather than looping and calling
seat_get_focus_by_type.
The original purpose of this commit is to replace some for loops with
list_find. But while doing this I found the workspace_prev_next_impl
functions to be difficult to read and also contained a bug, so I
refactored them and fixed the bug.
To reproduce the bug:
* Have two outputs, where the left output has workspaces 1, 2, 3 and the
right output has workspaces 4, 5, 6. Make workspace 2 focused_inactive
and workspace 4 focused.
* Run `workspace prev`.
* Previously it would visit the left output, then apply `workspace prev`
to workspace 2, which focuses workspace 1.
* Now it will focus the rightmost workspace on the left output
(workspace 3).
The refactoring I made to the workspace functions are:
* Added the static keyword.
* They now accept an int dir rather than bool, to avoid an unnecessary
conversion.
* Rather than preparing start and end variables for the purpose of
iterating, just iterate everything.
* Replace for loops with list_find.
* Don't call workspace_output_prev_next_impl (this fixes the bug).
Commit 4b8e3a885b makes it so only one
transaction is committed (ie. configures sent) at a time. This commit
removes the now-unnecessary code which was used to support concurrent
committed transactions.
* Instead of containers storing a list of instructions which they've
been sent, it now stores a single instruction.
* Containers now have an ntxnrefs property. Previously we knew how many
references there were by the length of the instruction list.
* Instructions no longer need a ready property. It was used to avoid
marking an instruction ready twice when they were in a list, but this is
now avoided because there is only one instruction and we nullify the
container->instruction pointer when it's ready.
* When a transaction applies, we no longer need to consider releasing
and resaving the surface, as we know there are no other committed
transactions.
* transaction_notify_view_ready has been renamed to
view_notify_view_ready_by_serial to make it consistent with
transaction_notify_view_ready_by_size.
* Out-of-memory checks have been added when creating transactions and
instructions.
* The OP_RESIZE seat operation has been renamed to OP_RESIZE_FLOATING,
and OP_RESIZE_TILING has been introduced.
* Similar to the above, seat_begin_resize and handle_resize_motion have
been renamed and tiling variants introduced.
* resize.c's resize_tiled has to be used, so container_resize_tiled has
been introduced in resize.c to allow external code to call it.
This allows for a color to be set when the wallpaper does not fill the
entire output. If specified, the fallback color is also used when the
image path is inaccessible.
Rationale: Sticky containers are always assigned to the visible
workspace.
The basic idea here is to check the destination's output (move.c:190).
But if the command was `move container to workspace x` then a workspace
might have been created for it. We could destroy the workspace in this
case, but that results in unnecessary IPC events.
To avoid this, the logic for `move container to workspace x` has been
adjusted. It now delays creating the workspace until the end, and uses
`workspace_get_initial_output` to determine and check the output before
creating it.
* Removes container_floating_move_to_container, instead opting to put
that logic in container_move_to
* In the seat code, focusing a floating view now updates the pending
state only and lets the next transaction carry it over to the current
state. This is required, otherwise it would crash.
* When unfullscreening a floating container, an output check is now done
to see if it should center it.
This creates a root.c and moves bits and pieces from elsewhere into it.
* layout_init has been renamed to root_create and moved into root.c
* root_destroy has been created and is called on shutdown
* scratchpad code has been moved into root.c, because hidden scratchpad
containers are stored in the root struct
Calling container_at_view fails an assertion if the container isn't a
view. Calling tiling_container_at works correctly, as that function
checks if the container is a view and calls container_at_view if so.
Fixes segfauls for any case where swaynag->outputs was not inititalized
including -h/--help, -v/--version, and invalid arguments.
Sets sane defaults for colors not given. Any color not given will
fallback to the default color values for type error.
Adds support for a hidpi cursor
When a container is moved from, say, workspace 1 to workspace 2, workspace 2 is focused in order to arrange the windows before focus is moved back to workspace 1, which caused a workspace:focus event from workspace 2 to workspace 1 to be emitted. This commit inhibits that event.
Fixes#2364.
Suppose a view is 600px wide, and we tell it to resize to 601px during a
resize operation. We create a transaction, save the 600px buffer and
send the configure. This buffer is saved into the associated
instruction, and is rendered while we wait for the view to commit a
601px buffer.
Before the view commits the 601px buffer, suppose we tell it to resize
to 602px. The new transaction will also save the buffer, but it's still
the 600px buffer because we haven't received a new one yet.
Then suppose the view commits its original 601px buffer. This completes
the first transaction, so we apply the 601px width to the container.
There's still the second (now only) transaction remaining, so we render
the saved buffer from that. But this is still the 600px buffer, and we
believe it's 601px. Whoops.
The problem here is we can't stack buffers like this. So this commit
removes the saved buffer from the instructions, places it in the view
instead, and re-saves the latest buffer every time the view completes a
transaction and still has further pending transactions.
As saved buffers are now specific to views rather than instructions, the
functions for saving and removing the saved buffer have been moved to
view.c.
The calls to save and restore the buffer have been relocated to more
appropriate functions too, favouring transaction_commit and
transaction_apply rather than transaction_add_container and
transaction_destroy.
Fixes the render and container_at order for popups.
Fixes#2210
For rendering:
* render_view_surfaces has been renamed to render_view_toplevels
* render_view_toplevels now uses output_surface_for_each_surface (which
is now public), as that function uses wlr_surface_for_each_surface which
doesn't descend into popups
* Views now have a for_each_popup iterator, which is used by the
renderer to render the focused view's popups
* When rendering a popup, toplevels (xdg subsurfaces) of that popup are
also rendered
For sending frame done, the logic has been updated to match the
rendering logic:
* send_frame_done_container no longer descends into popups
* for_each_popup is used to send frame done to the focused view's popups
and their child toplevels
For container_at:
* floating_container_at is now static, which means it had to be moved
higher in the file.
* container_at now considers popups for the focused view before checking
containers.
* tiling_container_at has been introduced, so that it doesn't call
container_at recursively (it would check popups recursively if it did)
Now 'repeat_delay' and 'repeat_rate' control the initial delay
and rate (per second) of repeated binding invocations.
If the repeat delay is zero, binding repetition is disabled.
When the repeat rate is zero, the binding is repeated exactly
once, assuming no other key events intervene.
Each sway_keyboard is provided with a wayland timer event source.
When a valid keypress binding has been found, a callback to
handle_keyboard_repeat is set. Any key event will either clear
the callback or (if the new key event is a valid keypress binding)
delay the callback again.
This introduces seat_get_focus_inactive_tiling and updates
`focus mode_toggle` to use it instead, because the previous method
wasn't guaranteed to return a tiling view.
Things worth noting:
* When a fullscreen view unmaps, the check to unset fullscreen on the
workspace has been moved out of view_unmap and into container_destroy,
because containers can be fullscreen too
* The calls to `container_reap_empty_recursive(workspace)` have been
removed from `container_set_floating`. That function reaps upwards so it
wouldn't do anything. I'm probably the one who originally added it...
* My fix (b14bd1b0b1) for the tabbed child
crash has a side effect where when you close a floating container, focus
is not given to the tiled container again. I've removed my fix and
removed the call to `send_cursor_motion` from `seat_set_focus_warp`. We
should consider calling it from somewhere earlier in the call stack.
After setting the keymap, try to enable NumLock and disable CapsLock.
This only works if sway has the xkb master state and controls the keyboard.
Prepare configuration settings for later use as well.
The rendering code doesn't use the exclusive input surface at all
anymore to decide to skip rendering of shell surfaces. This fixes
a weird situation in which a client requests exclusive input but
isn't an overlay layer surface.
The renderer also renders all overlay surfaces in this situation,
not just one. This simplifies the code and fixes rendering when
there are more than one overlay surfaces (e.g. for a virtual
keyboard to type the lockscreen password).
The mouse binding logic is inspired/copied from the
keyboard binding logic; we store a sorted list of the
currently pressed buttons, and trigger a binding when
the currently pressed (or just recently pressed, in
the case of a release binding) buttons, as well as
modifiers/container region, match those of a given
binding.
As the code to execute a binding is not very keyboard
specific, keyboard_execute_command is renamed to
seat_execute_command and moved to where the other
binding handling functions are. The call to
transaction_commit_dirty has been lifted out.
First, the existing sway_binding structure is given an
enumerated type code. As all flags to bindsym/bindcode
are boolean, a single uint32 is used to hold all flags.
The _BORDER, _CONTENTS, _TITLEBAR flags, when active,
indicate in which part of a container the binding can
trigger; to localize complexity, they do not overlap
with the command line arguments, which center around
_TITLEBAR being set by default.
The keyboard handling code is adjusted for this change,
as is binding_key_compare; note that BINDING_LOCKED
is *not* part of the key portion of the binding.
Next, list of mouse bindings is introduced and cleaned up.
Finally, the binding command parsing code is extended
to handle the case where bindsym is used to describe
a mouse binding rather than a keysym binding; the
difference between the two may be detected as late as
when the first key/button is parsed, or as early as
the first flag. As bindings can have multiple
keycodes/keysyms/buttons, mixed keysym/button sequences
are prohibited.
Implements the following commands:
* move scratchpad
* scratchpad show
* [criteria] scratchpad show
Also fixes these:
* Fix memory leak when executing command with criteria
(use `list_free(views)` instead of `free(views)`)
* Fix crash when running `move to` with no further arguments
This allows to update the title even if the view doesn't commit.
This is useful e.g. when a terminal sets its toplevel title to
the currently running command and when the view isn't visible.
Also does a few other related things:
* Now uses enum wlr_edges instead of our own enum resize_edge
* Now uses wlr_xcursor_get_resize_name and removes our own
find_resize_edge_name
* Renames drag to move for consistency
This implements the following:
* `floating_modifier` configuration directive
* Drag a floating window by its title bar
* Hold mod + drag a floating window from anywhere
* Resize a floating view by dragging the border
* Resize a floating view by holding mod and right clicking anywhere on
the view
* Resize a floating view and keep aspect ratio by holding shift while
resizing using either method
* Mouse cursor turns into resize when hovering floating border or corner
The directive sets the timeout before an urgent view becomes normal
again after switching to it from another workspace.
Also:
* When an xwayland surface removes the urgent hint while the timer is
active, we now ignore the request. This happens as soon as the view
receives focus, so it was effectively making the timer pointless.
* The timeout is now only applied when switching to it from another
workspace.
As well as ignoring scroll events on status elements when click_events
is enabled.
Previously, using the scroll wheel on a workspace button would switch to
that workspace instead of scrolling through them. Clicks and scrolling
on status elements would always be processed by swaybar, too. So in case
you were using scrolling as volume control on a status item, swaybar
would additionally scroll through your workspaces.
This removes the urgency stuff from the commit handler and puts it in a
new set_hints handler instead. This allows the xwayland surface to
become urgent without having to commit (which doesn't happen if it's on
an non-visible workspace).
Introduces a command to manually set urgency, as well as rendering of
urgent views, sending the IPC event, removing urgency after focused for
one second, and matching urgent views via criteria.
Rather than maintain copies of the entire focus stack, this PR
transactionises the focus by introducing two new properties to the
container state and using those when rendering.
* `bool focused` means this container has actual focus. Only one
container should have this equalling true in its current state.
* `struct sway_container *focus_inactive_child` points to the immediate
child that was most recently focused (eg. for tabbed and stacked
containers).
We currently have several ways of setting debug flags, including command
line arguments, environment variables, and compile-time macros. This
replaces the lot with command line flags.
This PR changes the way we handle transactions to a more simple method.
The new method is to mark containers as dirty from low level code
(eg. arranging, or container_destroy, and eventually seat_set_focus),
then call transaction_commit_dirty which picks up those containers and
runs them through a transaction. The old methods of using transactions
(arrange_and_commit, or creating one manually) are now no longer
possible.
The highest-level code (execute_command and view implementation
handlers) will call transaction_commit_dirty, so most other code just
needs to set containers as dirty. This is done by arranging, but can
also be done by calling container_set_dirty.
This commit introduces a scroll_button option, which is intended to be
used with scroll_method. Now user can edit his sway config and add an
scroll_button option to device section.
The only user of this function would copy the string right away
to get rid of the const flag anyway, and freeing a const string
afterwards might work but is not meant to be done according to the
json-c API.
wl_event_source_remove() is illegal after display has been destroyed,
so just destroy everything when we still can.
==20392==ERROR: AddressSanitizer: heap-use-after-free on address 0x607000001240 at pc 0x00000048e86e bp 0x7ffe4b557e00 sp 0x7ffe4b557df0
READ of size 8 at 0x607000001240 thread T0
#0 0x48e86d in wl_list_insert ../common/list.c:149
#1 0x7fdf673d4d7d in wl_event_source_remove src/event-loop.c:487
#2 0x41b742 in ipc_terminate ../sway/ipc-server.c:94
#3 0x40b1ad in main ../sway/main.c:440
#4 0x7fdf6664c18a in __libc_start_main ../csu/libc-start.c:308
#5 0x409359 in _start (/opt/wayland/bin/sway+0x409359)
0x607000001240 is located 48 bytes inside of 72-byte region [0x607000001210,0x607000001258)
freed by thread T0 here:
#0 0x7fdf692c4880 in __interceptor_free (/lib64/libasan.so.5+0xee880)
#1 0x7fdf673d371a in wl_display_destroy src/wayland-server.c:1097
previously allocated by thread T0 here:
#0 0x7fdf692c4c48 in malloc (/lib64/libasan.so.5+0xeec48)
#1 0x7fdf673d4d9e in wl_event_loop_create src/event-loop.c:522
#2 0x40acb2 in main ../sway/main.c:363
#3 0x7fdf6664c18a in __libc_start_main ../csu/libc-start.c:308
When you spawn a process with the exec command, sway now notes the
workspace you had focused and the pid of the child process, then assigns
that workspace to the child when its window appears.
Some of this is carried over from sway 0.15, but with some major
refactoring and centralization of state.
Rather than allocate a structure and expect callers to free it, take a
pointer to an existing struct as an argument.
This function is no longer called anywhere though.
Both sway_output and sway_layer_shell listen to wlr's output destroy event,
but sway_layer_shell needs to access into sway_output's data strucure and needs
to be destroyed first.
Resolve this by making sway_layer_shell listen to a new event that happens at
start of sway_output's destroy handler
Some operations during backend creation (e.g. becoming DRM master)
require CAP_SYS_ADMIN privileges. At this point, sway has dropped them
already, though. This patch splits the privileged part of server_init
into its own function and calls it before dropping its privileges.
This fixes the bug with minimal security implications.
* Ensure that modifier keys are identified even when the next key does
not produce a keysym. This requires that modifier change tracking
be done for each sway_shortcut_state.
* Permit regular and --release shortcuts on the same key combination.
Distinct bindings are identified for press and release cases; note
that the release binding needs to be identified for both key press
and key release events.
* Maintain ascending sort order for the shortcut state list, and keep
track of the number of pressed key ids, for simpler (and hence
faster) searching of the list of key bindings.
* Move binding duplicate detection into get_active_binding to avoid
duplicating error messages.
Sort the list comprising the set of keys for the binding in ascending
order. (Keyboard shortcuts depend only on the set of simultaneously
pressed keys, not their order, so this change should have no external
effect.) This simplifies comparisons between bindings.
* The arrange_foo functions are now replaced with arrange_and_commit, or
with manually created transactions and arrange_windows x2.
* The arrange functions are now only called from the highest level
functions rather than from both high level and low level functions.
* Due to the previous point, view_set_fullscreen_raw and
view_set_fullscreen are both merged into one function again.
* Floating and fullscreen are now working with transactions.
The whole state->xcb.modifiers thing didn't work at all (always 0)
The xkb doc says "[xkb_state_serialize_mods] should not be used in
regular clients; please use the xkb_state_mod_*_is_active API instead"
so here it is
The same shortcut algorithm is now used for keycodes,
raw keysyms, and translated keysyms. Pressed keysyms
are now stored in association with the keycodes that
generated them. Modifier keycodes (and associated
keysyms) are identified retroactively by the subsequent
change to the modifier flags.
Adds the --locked flag to bindsym and bindcode commands.
When a keyboard's associated seat has an exclusive client
(i.e, a screenlocker), then bindings are only executed if
they have the locked flag. When there is no such client,
this restriction is lifted.
* Add and use lenient_strcat and lenient_strncat functions
* Rename `concatenate_child_titles` function as that's no longer what it
does
* Rename `container_notify_child_title_changed` because we only need to
notify that the tree structure has changed, not titles
* Don't notify parents when a child changes its title
* Update ancestor titles when changing a container's layout
* Eg. create nested tabs and change the inner container to stacking
* No need to store tree presentation in both container->name and
formatted_title
Swayidle handles idle events and allows
for dpms and lockscreen handling. It also
handles systemd sleep events, and can
raise a lockscreen on sleep
Fixes#541
The criteria struct now uses properties for each token type rather than
the list_t list of tokens. The reason for this is that different token
types have different data types: pcre, string and number to name a few.
This solution should be more flexible moving forward. A bonus of this is
that criteria is now easier to understand when looking at the struct
definition.
The criteria parser has been rewritten because the previous one didn't
support valueless pairs (eg. [class="foo" floating]).
Criteria now has types. Types at the moment are CT_COMMAND,
CT_ASSIGN_WORKSPACE and CT_ASSIGN_OUTPUT. i3 uses types as well.
Previously the assign command was creating a criteria with 'move to
workspace <name>' as its command, but this caused the window to appear
briefly on the focused workspace before being moved to the assigned
workspace. It now creates the view directly in the assigned workspace.
Each view will only execute a given criteria once. This is achieved by
storing a list of executed criteria in the view. This is the same
strategy used by i3.
Escaping now works properly. Previously you could do things like
[class="Fire\"fox"] and the stored value would be 'Fire\"fox', but it
should be (and now is) 'Fire"fox'.
The public functions in criteria.c are now all prefixed with criteria_.
Xwayland views now listen to the set_title, set_class and
set_window_type events and criteria will be run when these happen. XDG
shell has none of these events so it continues to update the title in
handle_commit.
Each view type's get_prop function has been split into get_string_prop
and get_int_prop because some properties like the X11 window ID and
window type are numeric.
The following new criteria tokens are now supported:
* id (X11 window ID)
* instance
* tiling
* workspace
This implements the title_format command, with a new placeholder %shell
which gets substituted with the view type (xwayland, xdg_shell_v6 or
wl_shell).
Example config:
for_window [title=".*"] title_format %title (class=%class instance=%instance shell=%shell)
Implements rendering of borders. Title text is still to do.
Implements the following configuration directives:
* client.focused
* client.focused_inactive
* client.unfocused
* client.urgent
* border
* default_border
Replaces arrange_windows() with arrange_root(), arrange_output(),
arrange_workspace() and arrange_children_of().
Also makes fullscreen views save and restore their dimensions, which
allows it to preserve any custom resize and is also a requirement for
floating views once they are implemented.
- Replace char* with static array. Any chars > 1024 will be discarded.
- mlock() password buffer so it can't be written to swap.
- Clear password buffer after auth succeeds or fails.
This is basically the same treatment I gave the 0.15 branch in https://github.com/swaywm/sway/pull/1519
The exact semantics of this command are complicated. I'll describe each
test scenario as s-expressions. Everything assumes L_HORIZ if not
specified, but if you rotate everything 90 degrees the same test cases
hold.
```
(container (view a) (view b focus) (view c))
-> move left
(container (view b focus) (view a) (view c))
(container (view a) (view b focus) (view c))
-> move right
(container (view a) (view c) (view b focus))
(container L_VERT (view a))
(container L_HORIZ
(view b) (view c focus))
-> move up
(container L_VERT
(view a) (view c focus))
(container L_HORIZ (view b))
(workspace
(view a) (view b focus) (view c))
-> move up
(workspace [split direction flipped]
(view b focus)
(container (view a) (view c)))
(workspace
(view a) (view b focus) (view c))
-> move down
(workspace [split direction flipped]
(container (view a) (view c))
(view b focus)))
Note: outputs use wlr_output_layout instead of assuming that i+/-1 is
the next output in the move direction.
(root
(output X11-1
(workspace 1))
(output X11-2
(workspace 1 (view a focus) (view b)))))
-> move left
(root
(output X11-1
(workspace 1 (view a focus)))
(output X11-2
(workspace 1 (view b)))))
(root
(output X11-1
(workspace 1
(container (view a) (view b)))
(output X11-2
(workspace 1 (view c focus)))))
-> move left
(root
(output X11-1
(workspace 1
(container (view a) (view b))
(view c focus)))
(output X11-2
(workspace 1)))
```
Works:
- move [container|window] to workspace <name>
- Note, this should be able to move C_CONTAINER but this is untested
- move [workspace] to output [left|right|up|down|<name>]
Not implemented yet:
- move [left|right|up|down]
- move scratchpad
- move position
Also contains two other small changes:
- Clicking any button will focus the container clicked (not just left)
- Remove seamless_mouse (doesn't make sense on wlroots)
This starts up the event loop and wayland display and shims out the
basic top level rendering concepts. Also includes some changes to
incorporate pango into the 1.x codebase properly.
Xembed support is premature in sway and should be postponed. This commit
only removes swaybar starting xembedsniproxy, if users would like, they
can still start xembedsniproxy manually, however there will be no
official support.
This commit implements the StatusNotifierItem protocol, and enables
swaybar to show tray icons. It also uses `xembedsniproxy` in order to
communicate with xembed applications.
The tray is completely optional, and can be disabled on compile time
with the `enable-tray` option. Or on runtime with the bar config option
`tray_output none`.
Overview of changes:
In swaybar very little is changed outside the tray subfolder except
that all events are now polled in `event_loop.c`, this creates no
functional difference.
Six bar configuration options were added, these are detailed in
sway-bar(5)
The tray subfolder is where all protocol implementation takes place and
is organised as follows:
tray/sni_watcher.c:
This file contains the StatusNotifierWatcher. It keeps track of
items and hosts and reports when they come or go.
tray/tray.c
This file contains the StatusNotifierHost. It keeps track of
sway's version of the items and represents the tray itself.
tray/sni.c
This file contains the StatusNotifierItem struct and all
communication with individual items.
tray/icon.c
This file implements the icon theme protocol. It allows for
finding icons by name, rather than by pixmap.
tray/dbus.c
This file allows for asynchronous DBus communication.
See #986#343
_sway_assert is a variadic function which tries
to delegate to another variadic function. This
requires a vprintf-style variant of the delegate.
https://stackoverflow.com/a/150616
This commit changes how commands decide what container to act on.
Commands get the current container though `current_container`, a global
defined in sway/commands.c. If a criteria is given before a command,
then the following command will be run once for every container the
criteria matches with a reference to the matching container in
'current_container'. Commands should use this instead of
`get_focused_container()` from now on.
This commit also fixes a few (minor) mistakes made in implementing marks
such as non-escaped arrows in sway(5) and calling the "mark" command
"floating" by accident. It also cleans up `criteria.c` in a few places.
This commit adds three commands to sway: `show_marks`, `mark` and
`unmark`. Marks are displayed right-aligned in the window border as i3
does. Marks may be found using criteria.
Fixes#1007
This commit lets the 'move' command apply to floating containers as well
as tiled ones. The command may be appended with a number of pixels and
then optionally the string `px` (like '10 px') in order to move the
container more or fewer than the standard ten pixels.