This is a common interface that can be used for all primary selection
protocols, as discussed in [1]. A new function wlr_seat_set_primary_selection
is added to set the primary selection for all protocols.
The seat now owns again the source, and resets the selection to NULL when
destroyed.
[1]: https://github.com/swaywm/wlroots/issues/1367#issuecomment-442403454
This commits completely refactors wlr_gtk_primary_selection. The goal is to
remove gtk-primary-selection state from the seat and better handle inert
resources where it makes sense.
wlr_seat_client.primary_selection_devices has been removed and replaced by
wlr_gtk_primary_selection_device. This allows us to make offers inert when the
current selection is replaced.
wlr_seat_set_primary_selection has been removed because it relied on wlr_seat
instead of wlr_gtk_primary_selection_device_manager. A new function,
wlr_gtk_primary_selection_device_manager_set_selection (candidate for the
longest function name in wlroots) has been added. It doesn't take a serial
anymore as serial checking only makes sense for set_selection requests coming
from Wayland clients (serial checking is now done in the Wayland interface
implementation).
Since wlr_gtk_primary_selection_device_manager is now required to set the
selection, a new function wlr_xwayland_set_gtk_primary_selection_device_manager
(candidate number two for longest function name) has been added.
Devices are now made inert when the seat goes away.
Future work includes removing the last primary selection bits from the seat,
mainly wlr_seat.primary_selection_source and wlr_seat.events.primary_selection,
replacing those with new fields in wlr_gtk_primary_selection_device. Or maybe
we could keep those in the seat and replace them with a re-usable interface
(for future zwp_primary_selection_v1 support). We need to think how we'll sync
these three protocols (GTK, X11 and wayland-protocols).
See https://github.com/swaywm/wlroots/issues/1388
The compositor acts as a relay between applications using the text-input protocol and input methods using the input-method protocol.
This change implements the basic but useful support for input-method, leaving out grabs as well as popups.
These can be used by toolkits (currently Qt) to choose a default
cursor theme and size. Note that this isn't a perfect solution:
- Per-seat configuration isn't possible
- It's not possible to set the default image
- Live config reload isn't possible
But it's easy to implement and simple. To fix these remaining
issues a separate protocol would be needed.
This calculates and returns the effective damage of the surface in
surface coordinates, including the client damage (in buffer
coordinates), and damage induced by resize or move events.
Originally I asumed tilt_x and tilt_y are very unlikely to change
independent, I was proven wrong.
And while investigating Krita not using the Erasor tool, I found a bug,
which is unrelated though.
* Rename the constraint_create signal to new_constraint for
consistency
* Move the constraint_destroy signal to the constraint itself
* Use rotate_child_position instead of duplicating logic
* Fix inert constraint resource handling
* Style fixes
Sessions can now be retrieved from a backend in a more general manner.
Multi-backend gets back its `session` field that contains the session
if one was created, removing the interfacing from multi backend with the
drm backend directly. This adds the possibility to use sessions even
without the drm backend.
It additionally fixes the bug that 2 session objects got created when
WLR_BACKENDS were set to "libinput,drm".
To allow vt switching without drm backend (and drm fd) on logind, start
listening to PropertiesChanged signals from dbus and parse the session
"Active" property when no master fd was created (this does not change
current drm backend behaviour in any way).
I do not think the conversion is specifically defined, but on my system and SirCmpwn's
the floats are rounded instead of floored, which is incorrect in this case, since
for a range from 0 to 256, any value greater or equal to 0 and less than 256 is valid.
I.e. [0;256[, or 0 <= x < 256, but if x is e.g. -0.1, then it will be rounded to 0, which
is invalid. The correct behavior would be to floor to -1.
Layer surfaces are attached to edges of the screen starting with the youngest, causing new ones to always displace existing ones. This changes the order to oldest first, keeping the positions more often.