Merge pull request #1449 from swaywm/tinywl

Merge tinywl
This commit is contained in:
Drew DeVault 2019-01-03 17:14:00 -05:00 committed by GitHub
commit bcf48931db
No known key found for this signature in database
GPG key ID: 4AEE18F83AFDEB23
7 changed files with 1152 additions and 15 deletions

View file

@ -78,21 +78,6 @@ Install like so:
sudo ninja -C build install sudo ninja -C build install
## Running the test compositor
wlroots comes with a test compositor called rootston, which demonstrates the
features of the library and is used as a testbed for the development of the
library. It may also be useful as a reference for understanding how to use
various wlroots features, but it's not considered a production-quality codebase
and is not designed for daily use.
If you followed the build instructions above the rootston executable can be
found at `./build/rootston/rootston`. To use it, refer to the example config at
[./rootston/rootston.ini.example](https://github.com/swaywm/wlroots/blob/master/rootston/rootston.ini.example)
and place a config file of your own at `rootston.ini` in the working directory
(or in an arbitrary location via `rootston -C`). Other options are available,
refer to `rootston -h`.
## Contributing ## Contributing
See [CONTRIBUTING.md](https://github.com/swaywm/wlroots/blob/master/CONTRIBUTING.md). See [CONTRIBUTING.md](https://github.com/swaywm/wlroots/blob/master/CONTRIBUTING.md).

18
rootston/README.md Normal file
View file

@ -0,0 +1,18 @@
# rootston
Rootston is the "big" wlroots test compositor. It implements basically every
feature of wlroots and may be useful as a reference for new compositors.
However, it's mostly used as a testbed for wlroots development and does not have
particularly clean code and is not particularly well designed: proceed with a
grain of salt. It is not designed for end-users.
## Running rootston
If you followed the build instructions in `../README.md`, the rootston
executable can be found at `build/rootston/rootston`. To use it, refer to the
example config at [rootston/rootston.ini.example][rootston.ini] and place a
config file of your own at `rootston.ini` in the working directory (or in an
arbitrary location via `rootston -C`). Other options are available, refer to
`rootston -h`.
[rootston.ini]: https://github.com/swaywm/wlroots/blob/master/rootston/rootston.ini.example

3
tinywl/.gitignore vendored Normal file
View file

@ -0,0 +1,3 @@
tinywl
*-protocol.c
*-protocol.h

125
tinywl/LICENSE Normal file
View file

@ -0,0 +1,125 @@
This work is licensed under CC0, which effectively puts it in the public domain.
---
Creative Commons Legal Code
CC0 1.0 Universal
CREATIVE COMMONS CORPORATION IS NOT A LAW FIRM AND DOES NOT PROVIDE
LEGAL SERVICES. DISTRIBUTION OF THIS DOCUMENT DOES NOT CREATE AN
ATTORNEY-CLIENT RELATIONSHIP. CREATIVE COMMONS PROVIDES THIS
INFORMATION ON AN "AS-IS" BASIS. CREATIVE COMMONS MAKES NO WARRANTIES
REGARDING THE USE OF THIS DOCUMENT OR THE INFORMATION OR WORKS
PROVIDED HEREUNDER, AND DISCLAIMS LIABILITY FOR DAMAGES RESULTING FROM
THE USE OF THIS DOCUMENT OR THE INFORMATION OR WORKS PROVIDED
HEREUNDER.
Statement of Purpose
The laws of most jurisdictions throughout the world automatically confer
exclusive Copyright and Related Rights (defined below) upon the creator
and subsequent owner(s) (each and all, an "owner") of an original work of
authorship and/or a database (each, a "Work").
Certain owners wish to permanently relinquish those rights to a Work for
the purpose of contributing to a commons of creative, cultural and
scientific works ("Commons") that the public can reliably and without fear
of later claims of infringement build upon, modify, incorporate in other
works, reuse and redistribute as freely as possible in any form whatsoever
and for any purposes, including without limitation commercial purposes.
These owners may contribute to the Commons to promote the ideal of a free
culture and the further production of creative, cultural and scientific
works, or to gain reputation or greater distribution for their Work in
part through the use and efforts of others.
For these and/or other purposes and motivations, and without any
expectation of additional consideration or compensation, the person
associating CC0 with a Work (the "Affirmer"), to the extent that he or she
is an owner of Copyright and Related Rights in the Work, voluntarily
elects to apply CC0 to the Work and publicly distribute the Work under its
terms, with knowledge of his or her Copyright and Related Rights in the
Work and the meaning and intended legal effect of CC0 on those rights.
1. Copyright and Related Rights. A Work made available under CC0 may be
protected by copyright and related or neighboring rights ("Copyright and
Related Rights"). Copyright and Related Rights include, but are not
limited to, the following:
i. the right to reproduce, adapt, distribute, perform, display,
communicate, and translate a Work;
ii. moral rights retained by the original author(s) and/or performer(s);
iii. publicity and privacy rights pertaining to a person's image or
likeness depicted in a Work;
iv. rights protecting against unfair competition in regards to a Work,
subject to the limitations in paragraph 4(a), below;
v. rights protecting the extraction, dissemination, use and reuse of data
in a Work;
vi. database rights (such as those arising under Directive 96/9/EC of the
European Parliament and of the Council of 11 March 1996 on the legal
protection of databases, and under any national implementation
thereof, including any amended or successor version of such
directive); and
vii. other similar, equivalent or corresponding rights throughout the
world based on applicable law or treaty, and any national
implementations thereof.
2. Waiver. To the greatest extent permitted by, but not in contravention
of, applicable law, Affirmer hereby overtly, fully, permanently,
irrevocably and unconditionally waives, abandons, and surrenders all of
Affirmer's Copyright and Related Rights and associated claims and causes
of action, whether now known or unknown (including existing as well as
future claims and causes of action), in the Work (i) in all territories
worldwide, (ii) for the maximum duration provided by applicable law or
treaty (including future time extensions), (iii) in any current or future
medium and for any number of copies, and (iv) for any purpose whatsoever,
including without limitation commercial, advertising or promotional
purposes (the "Waiver"). Affirmer makes the Waiver for the benefit of each
member of the public at large and to the detriment of Affirmer's heirs and
successors, fully intending that such Waiver shall not be subject to
revocation, rescission, cancellation, termination, or any other legal or
equitable action to disrupt the quiet enjoyment of the Work by the public
as contemplated by Affirmer's express Statement of Purpose.
3. Public License Fallback. Should any part of the Waiver for any reason
be judged legally invalid or ineffective under applicable law, then the
Waiver shall be preserved to the maximum extent permitted taking into
account Affirmer's express Statement of Purpose. In addition, to the
extent the Waiver is so judged Affirmer hereby grants to each affected
person a royalty-free, non transferable, non sublicensable, non exclusive,
irrevocable and unconditional license to exercise Affirmer's Copyright and
Related Rights in the Work (i) in all territories worldwide, (ii) for the
maximum duration provided by applicable law or treaty (including future
time extensions), (iii) in any current or future medium and for any number
of copies, and (iv) for any purpose whatsoever, including without
limitation commercial, advertising or promotional purposes (the
"License"). The License shall be deemed effective as of the date CC0 was
applied by Affirmer to the Work. Should any part of the License for any
reason be judged legally invalid or ineffective under applicable law, such
partial invalidity or ineffectiveness shall not invalidate the remainder
of the License, and in such case Affirmer hereby affirms that he or she
will not (i) exercise any of his or her remaining Copyright and Related
Rights in the Work or (ii) assert any associated claims and causes of
action with respect to the Work, in either case contrary to Affirmer's
express Statement of Purpose.
4. Limitations and Disclaimers.
a. No trademark or patent rights held by Affirmer are waived, abandoned,
surrendered, licensed or otherwise affected by this document.
b. Affirmer offers the Work as-is and makes no representations or
warranties of any kind concerning the Work, express, implied,
statutory or otherwise, including without limitation warranties of
title, merchantability, fitness for a particular purpose, non
infringement, or the absence of latent or other defects, accuracy, or
the present or absence of errors, whether or not discoverable, all to
the greatest extent permissible under applicable law.
c. Affirmer disclaims responsibility for clearing rights of other persons
that may apply to the Work or any use thereof, including without
limitation any person's Copyright and Related Rights in the Work.
Further, Affirmer disclaims responsibility for obtaining any necessary
consents, permissions or other rights required for any use of the
Work.
d. Affirmer understands and acknowledges that Creative Commons is not a
party to this document and has no duty or obligation with respect to
this CC0 or use of the Work.

30
tinywl/Makefile Normal file
View file

@ -0,0 +1,30 @@
WAYLAND_PROTOCOLS=$(shell pkg-config --variable=pkgdatadir wayland-protocols)
WAYLAND_SCANNER=$(shell pkg-config --variable=wayland_scanner wayland-scanner)
LIBS=\
$(shell pkg-config --cflags --libs wlroots) \
$(shell pkg-config --cflags --libs wayland-server) \
$(shell pkg-config --cflags --libs xkbcommon)
# wayland-scanner is a tool which generates C headers and rigging for Wayland
# protocols, which are specified in XML. wlroots requires you to rig these up
# to your build system yourself and provide them in the include path.
xdg-shell-protocol.h:
$(WAYLAND_SCANNER) server-header \
$(WAYLAND_PROTOCOLS)/stable/xdg-shell/xdg-shell.xml $@
xdg-shell-protocol.c: xdg-shell-protocol.h
$(WAYLAND_SCANNER) private-code \
$(WAYLAND_PROTOCOLS)/stable/xdg-shell/xdg-shell.xml $@
tinywl: tinywl.c xdg-shell-protocol.h xdg-shell-protocol.c
$(CC) $(CFLAGS) \
-g -Werror -I. \
-DWLR_USE_UNSTABLE \
$(LIBS) \
-o $@ $<
clean:
rm -f tinywl xdg-shell-protocol.h xdg-shell-protocol.c
.DEFAULT_GOAL=tinywl
.PHONY: clean

47
tinywl/README.md Normal file
View file

@ -0,0 +1,47 @@
# TinyWL
This is the "minimum viable product" Wayland compositor based on wlroots. It
aims to implement a Wayland compositor in the fewest lines of code possible,
while still supporting a reasonable set of features. Reading this code is the
best starting point for anyone looking to build their own Wayland compositor
based on wlroots.
## Building TinyWL
TinyWL is disconencted from the main wlroots build system, in order to make it
easier to understand the build requirements for your own Wayland compositors.
Simply install the dependencies:
- wlroots
- wayland-protocols
And run `make`.
## Running TinyWL
You can run TinyWL with `./tinywl`. In an existing Wayland or X11 session,
tinywl will open a Wayland or X11 window respectively to act as a virtual
display. You can then open Wayland windows by setting `WAYLAND_DISPLAY` to the
value shown in the logs. You can also run `./tinywl` from a TTY.
In either case, you will likely want to specify `-s [cmd]` to run a command at
startup, such as a terminal emulator. This will be necessary to start any new
programs from within the compositor, as TinyWL does not support any custom
keybindings. TinyWL supports the following keybindings:
- `Alt+Escape`: Terminate the compositor
- `Alt+F1`: Cycle between windows
## Limitations
Notable omissions from TinyWL:
- HiDPI support
- Any kind of configuration, e.g. output layout
- Any protocol other than xdg-shell (e.g. layer-shell, for
panels/taskbars/etc; or Xwayland, for proxied X11 windows)
- Optional protocols, e.g. screen capture, primary selection, virtual
keyboard, etc. Most of these are plug-and-play with wlroots, but they're
omitted for brevity.
- Damage tracking, which tracks which parts of the screen are changing and
minimizes redraws accordingly.

929
tinywl/tinywl.c Normal file
View file

@ -0,0 +1,929 @@
#define _POSIX_C_SOURCE 200112L
#include <getopt.h>
#include <stdbool.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <time.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#include <wayland-server.h>
#include <wlr/backend.h>
#include <wlr/render/wlr_renderer.h>
#include <wlr/types/wlr_cursor.h>
#include <wlr/types/wlr_compositor.h>
#include <wlr/types/wlr_data_device.h>
#include <wlr/types/wlr_input_device.h>
#include <wlr/types/wlr_keyboard.h>
#include <wlr/types/wlr_linux_dmabuf_v1.h>
#include <wlr/types/wlr_matrix.h>
#include <wlr/types/wlr_output.h>
#include <wlr/types/wlr_output_layout.h>
#include <wlr/types/wlr_pointer.h>
#include <wlr/types/wlr_seat.h>
#include <wlr/types/wlr_xcursor_manager.h>
#include <wlr/types/wlr_xdg_shell.h>
#include <wlr/util/log.h>
#include <xkbcommon/xkbcommon.h>
/* For brevity's sake, struct members are annotated where they are used. */
enum tinywl_cursor_mode {
TINYWL_CURSOR_PASSTHROUGH,
TINYWL_CURSOR_MOVE,
TINYWL_CURSOR_RESIZE,
};
struct tinywl_server {
struct wl_display *wl_display;
struct wlr_backend *backend;
struct wlr_renderer *renderer;
struct wlr_xdg_shell *xdg_shell;
struct wl_listener new_xdg_surface;
struct wl_list views;
struct wlr_cursor *cursor;
struct wlr_xcursor_manager *cursor_mgr;
struct wl_listener cursor_motion;
struct wl_listener cursor_motion_absolute;
struct wl_listener cursor_button;
struct wl_listener cursor_axis;
struct wlr_seat *seat;
struct wl_listener new_input;
struct wl_listener request_cursor;
struct wl_list keyboards;
enum tinywl_cursor_mode cursor_mode;
struct tinywl_view *grabbed_view;
double grab_x, grab_y;
int grab_width, grab_height;
uint32_t resize_edges;
struct wlr_output_layout *output_layout;
struct wl_list outputs;
struct wl_listener new_output;
};
struct tinywl_output {
struct wl_list link;
struct tinywl_server *server;
struct wlr_output *wlr_output;
struct wl_listener frame;
};
struct tinywl_view {
struct wl_list link;
struct tinywl_server *server;
struct wlr_xdg_surface *xdg_surface;
struct wl_listener map;
struct wl_listener unmap;
struct wl_listener destroy;
struct wl_listener request_move;
struct wl_listener request_resize;
bool mapped;
int x, y;
};
struct tinywl_keyboard {
struct wl_list link;
struct tinywl_server *server;
struct wlr_input_device *device;
struct wl_listener modifiers;
struct wl_listener key;
};
struct tinywl_pointer {
struct wl_list link;
struct tinywl_server *server;
struct wlr_input_device *device;
};
static void focus_view(struct tinywl_view *view, struct wlr_surface *surface) {
/* Note: this function only deals with keyboard focus. */
if (view == NULL) {
return;
}
struct tinywl_server *server = view->server;
struct wlr_seat *seat = server->seat;
struct wlr_surface *prev_surface = seat->keyboard_state.focused_surface;
if (prev_surface == surface) {
/* Don't re-focus an already focused surface. */
return;
}
if (prev_surface) {
/*
* Deactivate the previously focused surface. This lets the client know
* it no longer has focus and the client will repaint accordingly, e.g.
* stop displaying a caret.
*/
struct wlr_xdg_surface *previous = wlr_xdg_surface_from_wlr_surface(
seat->keyboard_state.focused_surface);
wlr_xdg_toplevel_set_activated(previous, false);
}
struct wlr_keyboard *keyboard = wlr_seat_get_keyboard(seat);
/* Move the view to the front */
wl_list_remove(&view->link);
wl_list_insert(&server->views, &view->link);
/* Activate the new surface */
wlr_xdg_toplevel_set_activated(view->xdg_surface, true);
/*
* Tell the seat to have the keyboard enter this surface. wlroots will keep
* track of this and automatically send key events to the appropriate
* clients without additional work on your part.
*/
wlr_seat_keyboard_notify_enter(seat, view->xdg_surface->surface,
keyboard->keycodes, keyboard->num_keycodes, &keyboard->modifiers);
}
static void keyboard_handle_modifiers(
struct wl_listener *listener, void *data) {
/* This event is raised when a modifier key, such as shift or alt, is
* pressed. We simply communicate this to the client. */
struct tinywl_keyboard *keyboard =
wl_container_of(listener, keyboard, modifiers);
/*
* A seat can only have one keyboard, but this is a limitation of the
* Wayland protocol - not wlroots. We assign all connected keyboards to the
* same seat. You can swap out the underlying wlr_keyboard like this and
* wlr_seat handles this transparently.
*/
wlr_seat_set_keyboard(keyboard->server->seat, keyboard->device);
/* Send modifiers to the client. */
wlr_seat_keyboard_notify_modifiers(keyboard->server->seat,
&keyboard->device->keyboard->modifiers);
}
static bool handle_keybinding(struct tinywl_server *server, xkb_keysym_t sym) {
/*
* Here we handle compositor keybindings. This is when the compositor is
* processing keys, rather than passing them on to the client for its own
* processing.
*
* This function assumes Alt is held down.
*/
switch (sym) {
case XKB_KEY_Escape:
wl_display_terminate(server->wl_display);
break;
case XKB_KEY_F1:
/* Cycle to the next view */
if (wl_list_length(&server->views) < 2) {
break;
}
struct tinywl_view *current_view = wl_container_of(
server->views.next, current_view, link);
struct tinywl_view *next_view = wl_container_of(
current_view->link.next, next_view, link);
focus_view(next_view, next_view->xdg_surface->surface);
/* Move the previous view to the end of the list */
wl_list_remove(&current_view->link);
wl_list_insert(server->views.prev, &current_view->link);
break;
default:
return false;
}
return true;
}
static void keyboard_handle_key(
struct wl_listener *listener, void *data) {
/* This event is raised when a key is pressed or released. */
struct tinywl_keyboard *keyboard =
wl_container_of(listener, keyboard, key);
struct tinywl_server *server = keyboard->server;
struct wlr_event_keyboard_key *event = data;
struct wlr_seat *seat = server->seat;
/* Translate libinput keycode -> xkbcommon */
uint32_t keycode = event->keycode + 8;
/* Get a list of keysyms based on the keymap for this keyboard */
const xkb_keysym_t *syms;
int nsyms = xkb_state_key_get_syms(
keyboard->device->keyboard->xkb_state, keycode, &syms);
bool handled = false;
uint32_t modifiers = wlr_keyboard_get_modifiers(keyboard->device->keyboard);
if ((modifiers & WLR_MODIFIER_ALT) && event->state == WLR_KEY_PRESSED) {
/* If alt is held down and this button was _pressed_, we attempt to
* process it as a compositor keybinding. */
for (int i = 0; i < nsyms; i++) {
handled = handle_keybinding(server, syms[i]);
}
}
if (!handled) {
/* Otherwise, we pass it along to the client. */
wlr_seat_set_keyboard(seat, keyboard->device);
wlr_seat_keyboard_notify_key(seat, event->time_msec,
event->keycode, event->state);
}
}
static void server_new_keyboard(struct tinywl_server *server,
struct wlr_input_device *device) {
struct tinywl_keyboard *keyboard =
calloc(1, sizeof(struct tinywl_keyboard));
keyboard->server = server;
keyboard->device = device;
/* We need to prepare an XKB keymap and assign it to the keyboard. This
* assumes the defaults (e.g. layout = "us"). */
struct xkb_rule_names rules = { 0 };
struct xkb_context *context = xkb_context_new(XKB_CONTEXT_NO_FLAGS);
struct xkb_keymap *keymap = xkb_map_new_from_names(context, &rules,
XKB_KEYMAP_COMPILE_NO_FLAGS);
wlr_keyboard_set_keymap(device->keyboard, keymap);
xkb_keymap_unref(keymap);
xkb_context_unref(context);
wlr_keyboard_set_repeat_info(device->keyboard, 25, 600);
/* Here we set up listeners for keyboard events. */
keyboard->modifiers.notify = keyboard_handle_modifiers;
wl_signal_add(&device->keyboard->events.modifiers, &keyboard->modifiers);
keyboard->key.notify = keyboard_handle_key;
wl_signal_add(&device->keyboard->events.key, &keyboard->key);
wlr_seat_set_keyboard(server->seat, device);
/* And add the keyboard to our list of keyboards */
wl_list_insert(&server->keyboards, &keyboard->link);
}
static void server_new_pointer(struct tinywl_server *server,
struct wlr_input_device *device) {
/* We don't do anything special with pointers. All of our pointer handling
* is proxied through wlr_cursor. On another compositor, you might take this
* opportunity to do libinput configuration on the device to set
* acceleration, etc. */
wlr_cursor_attach_input_device(server->cursor, device);
}
static void server_new_input(struct wl_listener *listener, void *data) {
/* This event is raised by the backend when a new input device becomes
* available. */
struct tinywl_server *server =
wl_container_of(listener, server, new_input);
struct wlr_input_device *device = data;
switch (device->type) {
case WLR_INPUT_DEVICE_KEYBOARD:
server_new_keyboard(server, device);
break;
case WLR_INPUT_DEVICE_POINTER:
server_new_pointer(server, device);
break;
}
/* We need to let the wlr_seat know what our capabilities are, which is
* communiciated to the client. In TinyWL we always have a cursor, even if
* there are no pointer devices, so we always include that capability. */
uint32_t caps = WL_SEAT_CAPABILITY_POINTER;
if (!wl_list_empty(&server->keyboards)) {
caps |= WL_SEAT_CAPABILITY_KEYBOARD;
}
wlr_seat_set_capabilities(server->seat, caps);
}
static void seat_request_cursor(struct wl_listener *listener, void *data) {
struct tinywl_server *server = wl_container_of(
listener, server, request_cursor);
/* This event is rasied by the seat when a client provides a cursor image */
struct wlr_seat_pointer_request_set_cursor_event *event = data;
struct wlr_seat_client *focused_client =
server->seat->pointer_state.focused_client;
/* This can be sent by any client, so we check to make sure this one is
* actually has pointer focus first. */
if (focused_client == event->seat_client) {
/* Once we've vetted the client, we can tell the cursor to use the
* provided surface as the cursor image. It will set the hardware cursor
* on the output that it's currently on and continue to do so as the
* cursor moves between outputs. */
wlr_cursor_set_surface(server->cursor, event->surface,
event->hotspot_x, event->hotspot_y);
}
}
static bool view_at(struct tinywl_view *view,
double lx, double ly, struct wlr_surface **surface,
double *sx, double *sy) {
/*
* XDG toplevels may have nested surfaces, such as popup windows for context
* menus or tooltips. This function tests if any of those are underneath the
* coordinates lx and ly (in output Layout Coordinates). If so, it sets the
* surface pointer to that wlr_surface and the sx and sy coordinates to the
* coordinates relative to that surface's top-left corner.
*/
double view_sx = lx - view->x;
double view_sy = ly - view->y;
struct wlr_surface_state *state = &view->xdg_surface->surface->current;
double _sx, _sy;
struct wlr_surface *_surface = NULL;
_surface = wlr_xdg_surface_surface_at(
view->xdg_surface, view_sx, view_sy, &_sx, &_sy);
if (_surface != NULL) {
*sx = _sx;
*sy = _sy;
*surface = _surface;
return true;
}
return false;
}
static struct tinywl_view *desktop_view_at(
struct tinywl_server *server, double lx, double ly,
struct wlr_surface **surface, double *sx, double *sy) {
/* This iterates over all of our surfaces and attempts to find one under the
* cursor. This relies on server->views being ordered from top-to-bottom. */
struct tinywl_view *view;
wl_list_for_each(view, &server->views, link) {
if (view_at(view, lx, ly, surface, sx, sy)) {
return view;
}
}
return NULL;
}
static void process_cursor_move(struct tinywl_server *server, uint32_t time) {
/* Move the grabbed view to the new position. */
server->grabbed_view->x = server->cursor->x - server->grab_x;
server->grabbed_view->y = server->cursor->y - server->grab_y;
}
static void process_cursor_resize(struct tinywl_server *server, uint32_t time) {
/*
* Resizing the grabbed view can be a little bit complicated, because we
* could be resizing from any corner or edge. This not only resizes the view
* on one or two axes, but can also move the view if you resize from the top
* or left edges (or top-left corner).
*
* Note that I took some shortcuts here. In a more fleshed-out compositor,
* you'd wait for the client to prepare a buffer at the new size, then
* commit any movement that was prepared.
*/
struct tinywl_view *view = server->grabbed_view;
double dx = server->cursor->x - server->grab_x;
double dy = server->cursor->y - server->grab_y;
double x = view->x;
double y = view->y;
int width = server->grab_width;
int height = server->grab_height;
if (server->resize_edges & WLR_EDGE_TOP) {
y = server->grab_y + dy;
height -= dy;
if (height < 1) {
y += height;
}
} else if (server->resize_edges & WLR_EDGE_BOTTOM) {
height += dy;
}
if (server->resize_edges & WLR_EDGE_LEFT) {
x = server->grab_x + dx;
width -= dx;
if (width < 1) {
x += width;
}
} else if (server->resize_edges & WLR_EDGE_RIGHT) {
width += dx;
}
view->x = x;
view->y = y;
wlr_xdg_toplevel_set_size(view->xdg_surface, width, height);
}
static void process_cursor_motion(struct tinywl_server *server, uint32_t time) {
/* If the mode is non-passthrough, delegate to those functions. */
if (server->cursor_mode == TINYWL_CURSOR_MOVE) {
process_cursor_move(server, time);
return;
} else if (server->cursor_mode == TINYWL_CURSOR_RESIZE) {
process_cursor_resize(server, time);
return;
}
/* Otherwise, find the view under the pointer and send the event along. */
double sx, sy;
struct wlr_seat *seat = server->seat;
struct wlr_surface *surface = NULL;
struct tinywl_view *view = desktop_view_at(server,
server->cursor->x, server->cursor->y, &surface, &sx, &sy);
if (!view) {
/* If there's no view under the cursor, set the cursor image to a
* default. This is what makes the cursor image appear when you move it
* around the screen, not over any views. */
wlr_xcursor_manager_set_cursor_image(
server->cursor_mgr, "left_ptr", server->cursor);
}
if (surface) {
bool focus_changed = seat->pointer_state.focused_surface != surface;
/*
* "Enter" the surface if necessary. This lets the client know that the
* cursor has entered one of its surfaces.
*
* Note that this gives the surface "pointer focus", which is distinct
* from keyboard focus. You get pointer focus by moving the pointer over
* a window.
*/
wlr_seat_pointer_notify_enter(seat, surface, sx, sy);
if (!focus_changed) {
/* The enter event contains coordinates, so we only need to notify
* on motion if the focus did not change. */
wlr_seat_pointer_notify_motion(seat, time, sx, sy);
}
} else {
/* Clear pointer focus so future button events and such are not sent to
* the last client to have the cursor over it. */
wlr_seat_pointer_clear_focus(seat);
}
}
static void server_cursor_motion(struct wl_listener *listener, void *data) {
/* This event is forwarded by the cursor when a pointer emits a _relative_
* pointer motion event (i.e. a delta) */
struct tinywl_server *server =
wl_container_of(listener, server, cursor_motion);
struct wlr_event_pointer_motion *event = data;
/* The cursor doesn't move unless we tell it to. The cursor automatically
* handles constraining the motion to the output layout, as well as any
* special configuration applied for the specific input device which
* generated the event. You can pass NULL for the device if you want to move
* the cursor around without any input. */
wlr_cursor_move(server->cursor, event->device,
event->delta_x, event->delta_y);
process_cursor_motion(server, event->time_msec);
}
static void server_cursor_motion_absolute(
struct wl_listener *listener, void *data) {
/* This event is forwarded by the cursor when a pointer emits an _absolute_
* motion event, from 0..1 on each axis. This happens, for example, when
* wlroots is running under a Wayland window rather than KMS+DRM, and you
* move the mouse over the window. You could enter the window from any edge,
* so we have to warp the mouse there. There is also some hardware which
* emits these events. */
struct tinywl_server *server =
wl_container_of(listener, server, cursor_motion_absolute);
struct wlr_event_pointer_motion_absolute *event = data;
wlr_cursor_warp_absolute(server->cursor, event->device, event->x, event->y);
process_cursor_motion(server, event->time_msec);
}
static void server_cursor_button(struct wl_listener *listener, void *data) {
/* This event is forwarded by the cursor when a pointer emits a button
* event. */
struct tinywl_server *server =
wl_container_of(listener, server, cursor_button);
struct wlr_event_pointer_button *event = data;
/* Notify the client with pointer focus that a button press has occured */
wlr_seat_pointer_notify_button(server->seat,
event->time_msec, event->button, event->state);
double sx, sy;
struct wlr_seat *seat = server->seat;
struct wlr_surface *surface;
struct tinywl_view *view = desktop_view_at(server,
server->cursor->x, server->cursor->y, &surface, &sx, &sy);
if (event->state == WLR_BUTTON_RELEASED) {
/* If you released any buttons, we exit interactive move/resize mode. */
server->cursor_mode = TINYWL_CURSOR_PASSTHROUGH;
} else {
/* Focus that client if the button was _pressed_ */
focus_view(view, surface);
}
}
static void server_cursor_axis(struct wl_listener *listener, void *data) {
/* This event is forwarded by the cursor when a pointer emits an axis event,
* for example when you move the scroll wheel. */
struct tinywl_server *server =
wl_container_of(listener, server, cursor_axis);
struct wlr_event_pointer_axis *event = data;
/* Notify the client with pointer focus of the axis event. */
wlr_seat_pointer_notify_axis(server->seat,
event->time_msec, event->orientation, event->delta,
event->delta_discrete, event->source);
}
/* Used to move all of the data necessary to render a surface from the top-level
* frame handler to the per-surface render function. */
struct render_data {
struct wlr_output *output;
struct wlr_renderer *renderer;
struct tinywl_view *view;
struct timespec *when;
};
static void render_surface(struct wlr_surface *surface,
int sx, int sy, void *data) {
/* This function is called for every surface that needs to be rendered. */
struct render_data *rdata = data;
struct tinywl_view *view = rdata->view;
struct wlr_output *output = rdata->output;
/* We first obtain a wlr_texture, which is a GPU resource. wlroots
* automatically handles negotiating these with the client. The underlying
* resource could be an opaque handle passed from the client, or the client
* could have sent a pixel buffer which we copied to the GPU, or a few other
* means. You don't have to worry about this, wlroots takes care of it. */
struct wlr_texture *texture = wlr_surface_get_texture(surface);
if (texture == NULL) {
return;
}
/* The view has a position in layout coordinates. If you have two displays,
* one next to the other, both 1080p, a view on the rightmost display might
* have layout coordinates of 2000,100. We need to translate that to
* output-local coordinates, or (2000 - 1920). */
double ox = 0, oy = 0;
wlr_output_layout_output_coords(
view->server->output_layout, output, &ox, &oy);
ox += view->x + sx, oy += view->y + sy;
/* We also have to apply the scale factor for HiDPI outputs. This is only
* part of the puzzle, TinyWL does not fully support HiDPI. */
struct wlr_box box = {
.x = ox * output->scale,
.y = oy * output->scale,
.width = surface->current.width * output->scale,
.height = surface->current.height * output->scale,
};
/*
* Those familiar with OpenGL are also familiar with the role of matricies
* in graphics programming. We need to prepare a matrix to render the view
* with. wlr_matrix_project_box is a helper which takes a box with a desired
* x, y coodrinates, width and height, and an output geometry, then
* prepares an orthographic projection and multiplies the necessary
* transforms to produce a model-view-projection matrix.
*
* Naturally you can do this any way you like, for example to make a 3D
* compositor.
*/
float matrix[9];
enum wl_output_transform transform =
wlr_output_transform_invert(surface->current.transform);
wlr_matrix_project_box(matrix, &box, transform, 0,
output->transform_matrix);
/* This takes our matrix, the texture, and an alpha, and performs the actual
* rendering on the GPU. */
wlr_render_texture_with_matrix(rdata->renderer, texture, matrix, 1);
/* This lets the client know that we've displayed that frame and it can
* prepare another one now if it likes. */
wlr_surface_send_frame_done(surface, rdata->when);
}
static void output_frame(struct wl_listener *listener, void *data) {
/* This function is called every time an output is ready to display a frame,
* generally at the output's refresh rate (e.g. 60Hz). */
struct tinywl_output *output =
wl_container_of(listener, output, frame);
struct wlr_renderer *renderer = output->server->renderer;
struct timespec now;
clock_gettime(CLOCK_MONOTONIC, &now);
/* wlr_output_make_current makes the OpenGL context current. */
if (!wlr_output_make_current(output->wlr_output, NULL)) {
return;
}
/* The "effective" resolution can change if you rotate your outputs. */
int width, height;
wlr_output_effective_resolution(output->wlr_output, &width, &height);
/* Begin the renderer (calls glViewport and some other GL sanity checks) */
wlr_renderer_begin(renderer, width, height);
float color[4] = {0.3, 0.3, 0.3, 1.0};
wlr_renderer_clear(renderer, color);
/* Each subsequent window we render is rendered on top of the last. Because
* our view list is ordered front-to-back, we iterate over it backwards. */
struct tinywl_view *view;
wl_list_for_each_reverse(view, &output->server->views, link) {
if (!view->mapped) {
/* An unmapped view should not be rendered. */
continue;
}
struct render_data rdata = {
.output = output->wlr_output,
.view = view,
.renderer = renderer,
.when = &now,
};
/* This calls our render_surface function for each surface among the
* xdg_surface's toplevel and popups. */
wlr_xdg_surface_for_each_surface(view->xdg_surface,
render_surface, &rdata);
}
/* Conclude rendering and swap the buffers, showing the final frame
* on-screen. */
wlr_renderer_end(renderer);
wlr_output_swap_buffers(output->wlr_output, NULL, NULL);
}
static void server_new_output(struct wl_listener *listener, void *data) {
/* This event is rasied by the backend when a new output (aka a display or
* monitor) becomes available. */
struct tinywl_server *server =
wl_container_of(listener, server, new_output);
struct wlr_output *wlr_output = data;
/* Some backends don't have modes. DRM+KMS does, and we need to set a mode
* before we can use the output. The mode is a tuple of (width, height,
* refresh rate), and each monitor supports only a specific set of modes. We
* just pick the first, a more sophisticated compositor would let the user
* configure it or pick the mode the display advertises as preferred. */
if (!wl_list_empty(&wlr_output->modes)) {
struct wlr_output_mode *mode =
wl_container_of(wlr_output->modes.prev, mode, link);
wlr_output_set_mode(wlr_output, mode);
}
/* Allocates and configures our state for this output */
struct tinywl_output *output =
calloc(1, sizeof(struct tinywl_output));
output->wlr_output = wlr_output;
output->server = server;
/* Sets up a listener for the frame notify event. */
output->frame.notify = output_frame;
wl_signal_add(&wlr_output->events.frame, &output->frame);
wl_list_insert(&server->outputs, &output->link);
/* Adds this to the output layout. The add_auto function arranges outputs
* from left-to-right in the order they appear. A more sophisticated
* compositor would let the user configure the arrangement of outputs in the
* layout. */
wlr_output_layout_add_auto(server->output_layout, wlr_output);
/* Creating the global adds a wl_output global to the display, which Wayland
* clients can see to find out information about the output (such as
* DPI, scale factor, manufacturer, etc). */
wlr_output_create_global(wlr_output);
}
static void xdg_surface_map(struct wl_listener *listener, void *data) {
/* Called when the surface is mapped, or ready to display on-screen. */
struct tinywl_view *view = wl_container_of(listener, view, map);
view->mapped = true;
focus_view(view, view->xdg_surface->surface);
}
static void xdg_surface_unmap(struct wl_listener *listener, void *data) {
/* Called when the surface is unmapped, and should no longer be shown. */
struct tinywl_view *view = wl_container_of(listener, view, unmap);
view->mapped = false;
}
static void xdg_surface_destroy(struct wl_listener *listener, void *data) {
/* Called when the surface is destroyed and should never be shown again. */
struct tinywl_view *view = wl_container_of(listener, view, destroy);
wl_list_remove(&view->link);
free(view);
}
static void begin_interactive(struct tinywl_view *view,
enum tinywl_cursor_mode mode, uint32_t edges) {
/* This function sets up an interactive move or resize operation, where the
* compositor stops propegating pointer events to clients and instead
* consumes them itself, to move or resize windows. */
struct tinywl_server *server = view->server;
struct wlr_surface *focused_surface =
server->seat->pointer_state.focused_surface;
if (view->xdg_surface->surface != focused_surface) {
/* Deny move/resize requests from unfocused clients. */
return;
}
server->grabbed_view = view;
server->cursor_mode = mode;
struct wlr_box geo_box;
wlr_xdg_surface_get_geometry(view->xdg_surface, &geo_box);
if (mode == TINYWL_CURSOR_MOVE) {
server->grab_x = server->cursor->x - view->x;
server->grab_y = server->cursor->y - view->y;
} else {
server->grab_x = server->cursor->x + geo_box.x;
server->grab_y = server->cursor->y + geo_box.y;
}
server->grab_width = geo_box.width;
server->grab_height = geo_box.height;
server->resize_edges = edges;
}
static void xdg_toplevel_request_move(
struct wl_listener *listener, void *data) {
/* This event is raised when a client would like to begin an interactive
* move, typically because the user clicked on their client-side
* decorations. Note that a more sophisticated compositor should check the
* provied serial against a list of button press serials sent to this
* client, to prevent the client from requesting this whenver they want. */
struct tinywl_view *view = wl_container_of(listener, view, request_move);
begin_interactive(view, TINYWL_CURSOR_MOVE, 0);
}
static void xdg_toplevel_request_resize(
struct wl_listener *listener, void *data) {
/* This event is raised when a client would like to begin an interactive
* resize, typically because the user clicked on their client-side
* decorations. Note that a more sophisticated compositor should check the
* provied serial against a list of button press serials sent to this
* client, to prevent the client from requesting this whenver they want. */
struct wlr_xdg_toplevel_resize_event *event = data;
struct tinywl_view *view = wl_container_of(listener, view, request_resize);
begin_interactive(view, TINYWL_CURSOR_RESIZE, event->edges);
}
static void server_new_xdg_surface(struct wl_listener *listener, void *data) {
/* This event is raised when wlr_xdg_shell receives a new xdg surface from a
* client, either a toplevel (application window) or popup. */
struct tinywl_server *server =
wl_container_of(listener, server, new_xdg_surface);
struct wlr_xdg_surface *xdg_surface = data;
if (xdg_surface->role != WLR_XDG_SURFACE_ROLE_TOPLEVEL) {
return;
}
/* Allocate a tinywl_view for this surface */
struct tinywl_view *view =
calloc(1, sizeof(struct tinywl_view));
view->server = server;
view->xdg_surface = xdg_surface;
/* Listen to the various events it can emit */
view->map.notify = xdg_surface_map;
wl_signal_add(&xdg_surface->events.map, &view->map);
view->unmap.notify = xdg_surface_unmap;
wl_signal_add(&xdg_surface->events.unmap, &view->unmap);
view->destroy.notify = xdg_surface_destroy;
wl_signal_add(&xdg_surface->events.destroy, &view->destroy);
/* cotd */
struct wlr_xdg_toplevel *toplevel = xdg_surface->toplevel;
view->request_move.notify = xdg_toplevel_request_move;
wl_signal_add(&toplevel->events.request_move, &view->request_move);
view->request_resize.notify = xdg_toplevel_request_resize;
wl_signal_add(&toplevel->events.request_resize, &view->request_resize);
/* Add it to the list of views. */
wl_list_insert(&server->views, &view->link);
}
int main(int argc, char *argv[]) {
wlr_log_init(WLR_DEBUG, NULL);
char *startup_cmd = NULL;
int c;
while ((c = getopt(argc, argv, "s:h")) != -1) {
switch (c) {
case 's':
startup_cmd = optarg;
break;
default:
printf("Usage: %s [-s startup command]\n", argv[0]);
return 0;
}
}
if (optind < argc) {
printf("Usage: %s [-s startup command]\n", argv[0]);
return 0;
}
struct tinywl_server server;
/* The Wayland display is managed by libwayland. It handles accepting
* clients from the Unix socket, manging Wayland globals, and so on. */
server.wl_display = wl_display_create();
/* The backend is a wlroots feature which abstracts the underlying input and
* output hardware. The autocreate option will choose the most suitable
* backend based on the current environment, such as opening an X11 window
* if an X11 server is running. The NULL argument here optionally allows you
* to pass in a custom renderer if wlr_renderer doesn't meet your needs. The
* backend uses the renderer, for example, to fall back to software cursors
* if the backend does not support hardware cursors (some older GPUs
* don't). */
server.backend = wlr_backend_autocreate(server.wl_display, NULL);
/* If we don't provide a renderer, autocreate makes a GLES2 renderer for us.
* The renderer is responsible for defining the various pixel formats it
* supports for shared memory, this configures that for clients. */
server.renderer = wlr_backend_get_renderer(server.backend);
wlr_renderer_init_wl_display(server.renderer, server.wl_display);
/* This creates some hands-off wlroots interfaces. The compositor is
* necessary for clients to allocate surfaces, dmabuf allows them to use
* opaque GPU handles for buffers to avoid copying pixels on the CPU, and
* the data device manager handles the clipboard. Each of these wlroots
* interfaces has room for you to dig your fingers in and play with their
* behavior if you want. */
wlr_compositor_create(server.wl_display, server.renderer);
wlr_linux_dmabuf_v1_create(server.wl_display, server.renderer);
wlr_data_device_manager_create(server.wl_display);
/* Creates an output layout, which a wlroots utility for working with an
* arrangement of screens in a physical layout. */
server.output_layout = wlr_output_layout_create();
/* Configure a listener to be notified when new outputs are available on the
* backend. */
wl_list_init(&server.outputs);
server.new_output.notify = server_new_output;
wl_signal_add(&server.backend->events.new_output, &server.new_output);
/* Set up our list of views and the xdg-shell. The xdg-shell is a Wayland
* protocol which is used for application windows. For more detail on
* shells, refer to my article:
*
* https://drewdevault.com/2018/07/29/Wayland-shells.html
*/
wl_list_init(&server.views);
server.xdg_shell = wlr_xdg_shell_create(server.wl_display);
server.new_xdg_surface.notify = server_new_xdg_surface;
wl_signal_add(&server.xdg_shell->events.new_surface,
&server.new_xdg_surface);
/*
* Creates a cursor, which is a wlroots utility for tracking the cursor
* image shown on screen.
*/
server.cursor = wlr_cursor_create();
wlr_cursor_attach_output_layout(server.cursor, server.output_layout);
/* Creates an xcursor manager, another wlroots utility which loads up
* Xcursor themes to source cursor images from and makes sure that cursor
* images are available at all scale factors on the screen (necessary for
* HiDPI support). We add a cursor theme at scale factor 1 to begin with. */
server.cursor_mgr = wlr_xcursor_manager_create(NULL, 24);
wlr_xcursor_manager_load(server.cursor_mgr, 1);
/*
* wlr_cursor *only* displays an image on screen. It does not move around
* when the pointer moves. However, we can attach input devices to it, and
* it will generate aggregate events for all of them. In these events, we
* can choose how we want to process them, forwarding them to clients and
* moving the cursor around. More detail on this process is described in my
* input handling blog post:
*
* https://drewdevault.com/2018/07/17/Input-handling-in-wlroots.html
*
* And more comments are sprinkled throughout the notify functions above.
*/
server.cursor_motion.notify = server_cursor_motion;
wl_signal_add(&server.cursor->events.motion, &server.cursor_motion);
server.cursor_motion_absolute.notify = server_cursor_motion_absolute;
wl_signal_add(&server.cursor->events.motion_absolute,
&server.cursor_motion_absolute);
server.cursor_button.notify = server_cursor_button;
wl_signal_add(&server.cursor->events.button, &server.cursor_button);
server.cursor_axis.notify = server_cursor_axis;
wl_signal_add(&server.cursor->events.axis, &server.cursor_axis);
/*
* Configures a seat, which is a single "seat" at which a user sits and
* operates the computer. This conceptually includes up to one keyboard,
* pointer, touch, and drawing tablet device. We also rig up a listener to
* let us know when new input devices are available on the backend.
*/
wl_list_init(&server.keyboards);
server.new_input.notify = server_new_input;
wl_signal_add(&server.backend->events.new_input, &server.new_input);
server.seat = wlr_seat_create(server.wl_display, "seat0");
server.request_cursor.notify = seat_request_cursor;
wl_signal_add(&server.seat->events.request_set_cursor,
&server.request_cursor);
/* Add a Unix socket to the Wayland display. */
const char *socket = wl_display_add_socket_auto(server.wl_display);
if (!socket) {
wlr_backend_destroy(server.backend);
return 1;
}
/* Start the backend. This will enumerate outputs and inputs, become the DRM
* master, etc */
if (!wlr_backend_start(server.backend)) {
wlr_backend_destroy(server.backend);
wl_display_destroy(server.wl_display);
return 1;
}
/* Set the WAYLAND_DISPLAY environment variable to our socket and run the
* startup command if requested. */
setenv("WAYLAND_DISPLAY", socket, true);
if (startup_cmd) {
if (fork() == 0) {
execl("/bin/sh", "/bin/sh", "-c", startup_cmd, (void *)NULL);
}
}
/* Run the Wayland event loop. This does not return until you exit the
* compositor. Starting the backend rigged up all of the necessary event
* loop configuration to listen to libinput events, DRM events, generate
* frame events at the refresh rate, and so on. */
wlr_log(WLR_INFO, "Running Wayland compositor on WAYLAND_DISPLAY=%s",
socket);
wl_display_run(server.wl_display);
/* Once wl_display_run returns, we shut down the server. */
wl_display_destroy_clients(server.wl_display);
wl_display_destroy(server.wl_display);
return 0;
}