If Xwayland is restarted, the ready handler assumes there is no xwm instance.
This means all of xwm was leaked on Xwayland restart. This caused compositors
to consume all cpu resources, where time is spent dispatching. Now we destroy
xwm if we get an event mask containing WL_EVENT_HANGUP or WL_EVENT_ERROR.
The xwayland ready signals are used to do initial setup like starting xwm.
Discarding the signals means that the handler functions will not be called
in the case that Xwayland is restarted and thus, xwm managed clients fail.
Fixes #2174."
wlr_drag sets up keyboard, pointer and touch grabs, which block 'enter'
events (and thus focus changes). For the compositor to be able to update
focus (e.g. to focus the drop target) from the destroy handler, the
grabs must be released before the destroy event is signalled.
The output backend API is now mostly state-less thanks to the atomic
hooks (commit and test). There is one exception though: attach_render.
This function makes the rendering context current. However sometimes the
compositor might decide not to render after attach_render (e.g. when
there's nothing new to render to the back buffer). Thus
wlr_output_rollback has been introduced to revert the pending state.
Because the output backend API is mostly state-less, the only thing
wlr_output_impl.rollback needs to do is revert the current rendering
context. Rename the function to rollback_render to make this clear. Add
a check in the common wlr_output code to only call rollback_render when
attach_buffer has been previously called.
On the long term, we'll be able to remove attach_render and
rollback_render together.
During surface finalization we may not have received a new buffer,
resetting width and height in this case is wrong since we display the
old buffer in this case.
texcoord is a vector of coordinates, with the first member being the X
axis value and the second member being the Y axis value. It makes more
sense to use the accessors with the same names.
Remove the wlr_linux_dmabuf_v1_create call. wlr_renderer_init_wl_display
will take care of creating the linux-dmabuf global if the OpenGL
implementation supports it.
Prior to this commit, wlr_egl_init seemed to assume the extension string
queried via EGL_NO_DISPLAY was a subset of the extension string queried
via an initialized display. This isn't correct.
EGL_EXT_client_extensions [1] defines two types of extensions: client
extensions and display extensions. The set of supported client and
display extensions are disjoint (ie. an extension is either a client or
a display extension, not both). Client extensions are queried via
EGL_NO_DISPLAY, display extensions are queried via an initialized
display.
Rename the variables to make this clear. Remove the misleading comment.
Log both client and display extensions.
[1]: https://www.khronos.org/registry/EGL/extensions/EXT/EGL_EXT_client_extensions.txt
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/time.cc` so that it can be reused elsewhere
without having to consider these pitfalls.
This is necessary for some grabs, which currently have no way of knowing
when the pointer/keyboard focus has left a surface. For example, without
this, a drag-and-drop grab can erroneously drop into a window that the
cursor is no longer over.
This is the plumbing needed to properly fix swaywm/sway#5220. The
existing fix, swaywm/sway#5222, relies on every grab's `enter()` hook
allowing a `NULL` surface. This is not guaranteed by the API and, in
fact, is not the case for the xdg-shell popup grab and results in a
crash when the cursor leaves a surface and does not immediately enter
another one while a popup is open (#2161).
This fix also adds an assertion to wlr_seat_pointer_notify_enter() that
ensures it's never called with a `NULL` surface. This will make Sway
crash much more until it fixes its usage of the API, so we should land
this at the same time as a fix in Sway (which I haven't posted yet).
I found the previous wording a bit confusing when I first read it.
Reword these comments to explicitly say that the grab-respecting
variants should be used in most cases.
This change has no functional effect.
These three APIs are very similar to one another, but they all had
slightly different function orderings. For consistency, always declare
the non_`notify` functions first, then the `notify` functions, then
`{start,end,has}_grab`.
This change has no functional effect.