This utilizes the newer Github issue templates. They allow for the user
to specify what type of issue they are submitting to allow for a more
specific issue template to be shown.
In addition to a hopefully easier to read/parse/follow bug report
template, this also include templates for enhancements and i3
compatibility. This also includes a link to the IRC under the section
title Questions.
For the three templates, the labels bug, enhancement, and i3-compat will
be automatically applied for the appropriate report to assist in
triaging.
Hopefully, this will result in less questions and issues for new window
management functionality on Github and allow for better quality issues
being submitted. At the very least, it allows us to outline our
stances for bugs, enhancements, and i3-compatibility in an easier to
read format.
xdg-shell doesn't allow clients to set the title to NULL, so we
shouldn't need to call wlr_foreign_toplevel_handle_v1_set_title with an
empty string to reset the old one.
Closes: https://github.com/swaywm/sway/issues/5488
If moving e.g. `T[app app]` into a new workspace with `workspace_layout
tabbed`, then post-move the tree in that workspace will be `T[T[app
app]]`. This still happens with horizontal or vertical workspace layout,
but is less visible since those containers have no decorations.
Fixes#5426.
It is not a part of the foreign-toplevel-management protocol to get the
class of a toplevel, only for getting the app_id.
For xwayland clients this is an issue because that means that you cannot
identify what application the toplevel refers to which is the point of
the app_id property.
By falling back to class when an app_id does not exist solves this problem.
Phoc also uses app_id and class interchangeably in their implementation
of foreign-toplevel-management, in fact they always do that and not only
for just this protocol.
c8d8a4c544/src/xwayland.c (L236)
wlr_drag installs grabs for the full duration of the drag, leading to
the drag target not being focused when the drag ends. This leads to
unexpected focus behavior, especially for the keyboard which requires
toggling focus away and back to set.
We can only fix the focus once the grabs are released, so refocus the
seat when the wlr_drag destroy event is received.
Closes: https://github.com/swaywm/sway/issues/5116
If a client commits a new size on its own, we create a transaction for
the resize like any other. However, this involves sending a configure
and waiting for the ack, and wlroots will not send configure events when
there has been no change. This leads to transactions timing out.
Instead, just mark the view ready immediately by size when the client
is already ready, so that we avoid waiting for an ack that will never
come.
Closes: https://github.com/swaywm/sway/issues/5490
Prior to this commit, a tablet device could trigger mouse button down
bindings if the pen was pressed on a surface that didn't bind tablet
handlers -- but it wouldn't if the surface did bind tablet handlers.
We should expose consistent behavior to users so that they don't have to
care about emulated vs. non-emulated input, so stop triggering bindings
for any non-pointer devices.
Previously, a tablet or touch device could report activity as a pointer
device if it went through pointer emulation. This commit refactors idle
sources to be consistently reported based on the type of the device that
generated an input event, and now how that input event is being
processed.
Prior to this commit, a tablet device could trigger mouse button down
bindings if the pen was pressed on a surface that didn't bind tablet
handlers -- but it wouldn't if the surface did bind tablet handlers.
We should expose consistent behavior to users so that they don't have to
care about emulated vs. non-emulated input, so stop triggering bindings
for any non-pointer devices.
This commit makes tablet input more usable when `focus_follows_mouse` is
set to `no`.
Previously, tapping down on surfaces that bound tablet input would not
switch focus, whereas tapping on surfaces that didn't (and hence went
through pointer emulation) did.
This adds support for wlr_keyboard_group's enter and leave events. The
enter event just updates the keyboard's state. The leave event updates
the keyboard's state and if the surface was notified of a press event
for any of the keycodes, it is refocused so that it can pick up the
current keyboard state without triggering any keybinds.
`$WAYLAND_SOCKET` is unset by `wl_display_connect` after it has
successfully connected to the wayland socket.
However, subprocesses spawned by swaybar (status-command) don't have
access to waybar's fds as $WAYLAND_SOCKET is O_CLOEXEC. This means any
status command which itself tries to connect to wayland will fail if
this environment variable is set.
Reorder display and status-command initialization so that this variable
is not set and add an assert so we can enforce this invariant in future.
In case `wl_display_roundtrip` returns an error after registering for
events, print a more user-friendly error message and exit.
Previously, if the build did not have assertions enabled, this would
likely result in a segfault. With assertions enabled, it's not user
friendly to terminate with internal implementation information.
If a resize is triggered on a tabbed or stacked container, change focus
to the tab which already had inactive focus, rather than to the tab
whose border was clicked -- otherwise, we'd change the active tab when
the user probably just wanted to resize.
This commit makes `get_current_time_msec` correctly return milliseconds
as opposed to microseconds. It also considers the value of `tv_sec`, so
we don't lose occasionally go back in time by one second. Finally, the
function is moved into `util.c` so that it can be reused elsewhere
without having to consider these pitfalls.
We are not allowed to do what we did in #5222 and pass a `NULL` surface
wlr_seat_pointer_notify_enter(), and it's causing crashes when an
xdg-shell popup is active (see #5294 and swaywm/wlroots#2161).
Instead, solve #5220 using the new wlroots API introduced in
swaywm/wlroots#2217.
This commit moves tool tip event generation into seatops. In doing so,
some corner cases where we'd erroneously (but likely harmlessly)
generate both tablet and pointer events simultaneously are eliminated.