* renderer: add destructor and destroy event source
add destructor and destroy the event source.
one less leak on exit of compositor reported by asan.
* compositor: cleanup eventloop on exit
destruct hyprctl to release the event sources, and properly cleanup the
event loop on exit of compositor. less leaks on exit reported by asan
* threadmgr: destroy event source on destruction
destroy the event source on destruction.
* eventloopmgr: reset eventloopmgr on exit aswell
reset the eventloopmanager on exit of compositor and free the leaking
last idle frame on monitor destroy.
* core: move to hyprutils for utils
Nix: add hyprutils dep
* Meson: add hyprutils dep
* flake.lock: update
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Co-authored-by: Mihai Fufezan <mihai@fufexan.net>
moves std::shared_ptrs to a new implementation
Advantages:
- you can dereference a weak_ptr directly. This will obviously segfault on a nullptr deref if it's expired.
- this is useful to avoid the .lock() hell where we are 100% sure the pointer _should_ be valid. (and if it isn't, it should throw.)
- weak_ptrs are still valid while the SP is being destroyed.
- reasoning: while an object (e.g. CWindow) is being destroyed, its `weak_ptr self` should be accessible (the sp is still alive, and so is CWindow), but it's not because by stl it's already expired (to prevent resurrection)
- this impl solves it differently. w_p is expired, but can still be dereferenced and used. Creating `s_p`s is not possible anymore, though.
- this is useful in destructors and callbacks.
Implements an intermediary HID class for mice, keyboards and touch devices, removing the old structs from WLClasses.hpp
Yes, virtual ones are duplicated a bit, but will likely be de-duped once wlr_input_device is not used anymore.
* added option to choose the default monitor that the cursor will appear in upon startup
* fix: don't set cursor to default monitor after startup
* refactor to checkDefaultCursorWarp also fix focus
By default enabled, will track the initial opened workspace of a window spawned for 2 minutes or until it's moved to a different workspace.
For example: you run a launcher and open an app on workspace 1, but quickly switch to workspace 2. The app will now open on workspace 1 regardless of your switch.