For XWayland surfaces that start maximized, it's best to send an initial
Configure event to set the size of the surface before mapping it. This
reduces visual glitches since the application sees the correct maximized
size when performing its initial layout and drawing.
wlroots surfaces emit their first "map" event after the XWayland window
has already been mapped and the first frame has been drawn & committed.
This is too late to send the initial Configure event.
So, add a new "map_request" event which is emitted immediately before
telling XWayland to map the window. Compositors can connect to this
event to send the initial Configure event to an XWayland app based on
its requested maximized (or fullscreen) state.
Compositors should not place anything visually on the screen at this
point but rather wait until the "map" event as before.
scan-build is a little confused, thinking xwm->xres value could change
during the execution of xwayland_surface_create so client_id_cookie
could end up used uninitialized.
The struct is just an unsigned int, so no harm in initializing it to get
it off the list.
Stop trying to maintain a per-file _POSIX_C_SOURCE. Instead,
require POSIX.1-2008 globally. A lot of core source files depend
on that already.
Some care must be taken on a few select files where we need a bit
more than POSIX. Some files need XSI extensions (_XOPEN_SOURCE) and
some files need BSD extensions (_DEFAULT_SOURCE). In both cases,
these feature test macros imply _POSIX_C_SOURCE. Make sure to not
define both these macros and _POSIX_C_SOURCE explicitly to avoid
POSIX requirement conflicts (e.g. _POSIX_C_SOURCE says POSIX.1-2001
but _XOPEN_SOURCE says POSIX.1-2008).
Additionally, there is one special case in render/vulkan/vulkan.c.
That file needs major()/minor(), and these are system-specific.
On FreeBSD, _POSIX_C_SOURCE hides system-specific symbols so we need
to make sure it's not defined for this file. On Linux, we can
explicitly include <sys/sysmacros.h> and ensure that apart from
symbols defined there the file only uses POSIX toys.
A motivating example of such problem - Zoom's popups that open on button presses.
Before this fix the popup would flicker and immediately disappear - because the PID is not yet
available for the verification (as the surface has not been associated yet), wlroots would refuse to
focus the popup and instead focus the previous window. This leads QT to interpret this as a sign to
close the popup.
This change moves the PID aqcuisition to an earlier phase - just where the window is created.
Instead, move the wlr_xwayland_surface_set_withdrawn() and
wlr_xwayland_surface_restack() calls to the MapNotify handler with an
override_redirect check, as they are done too early. This mirrors the logic in
the UnmapNotify handler and fixes a bug where wlr_xwayland_surface_restack()
would be called on an o-r window after the following sequence of requests:
- CreateWindow with override_redirect=True
- ChangeWindowAttributes with override_redirect=False
- MapWindow
Fixes: https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/wlroots/wlroots/-/issues/3770
This function allows compositors to set the _NET_WORKAREA property on
the root window. XWayland clients use _NET_WORKAREA to determine how
much of the screen is not covered by panels/docks. The property is used
for example by Qt to determine areas of the screen that popup menus
should not overlap (see QScreen::availableVirtualGeometry).
Translating the right/bottom coordinates from offsets to absolute
coordinates in wlroots (rather than in the compositor) was supposed to
be more reliable, since wlroots had access to the X11 screen size.
It ended up being less reliable, because the screen size values
(xwm->screen->width_in_pixels/height_in_pixels) are not updated when the
output layout changes.
So let's remove the translation from wlroots, and let the compositor
figure it out. From what I can understand of the current XWayland code,
the X11 screen size should generally match the overall wlr_output_layout
bounding box, which the compositor has access to.
Instead of sending one request, waiting for the reply, and
repeating for all properties we're interested in, we can send all
property requests in one go and then wait for the server to reply.
We'll soon introduce a unified wlr_surface map event. Up until now, compositors
have been using wlr_xwayland_surface's map event to setup various wlr_surface
related listeners (e.g. commit). This will no longer be possible when that
event is moved over to wlr_surface. Introduce new events where the compositor
can add/remove wlr_surface event listeners.
X11 clients expect a ConfigureNotify after a ConfigureRequest. If
the compositor/window manager chooses not to honor the request
(e.g. due to the window being maximized), XWayland will not send a
"real" ConfigureNotify event and the window manager is expected to
send a synthetic event instead. Otherwise, the X11 client is left
waiting and may not repaint its window properly.
For comparison, see Openbox's client_configure() or Weston's
weston_wm_window_send_configure_notify().
v2: Move logic to wlr_xwayland_surface_configure()
This is needed for compositors that want to reserve space for
XWayland panels. Such a feature can be useful in a "transitional"
setup, where only the X11 window manager and compositor is replaced
but other components of an X11 desktop environment are still used.
This change simply reads the X11 property; the compositor is free
to ignore it. Thus, compositors that don't want to support such a
"transitional" feature are not impacted.
v2: Update xwayland_surface_associate()
If a window is unmapped too quickly, we might receive UnmapNotify before
we get the corresponding wl_surface, which will later lead to
associating the same window twice. To fix this, move the NULL surface
check to xwayland_surface_dissociate(), which makes resetting the
unpaired link and the wl_surface object ID unconditional.
Fixes: https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/wlroots/wlroots/-/issues/3552
Rename xwm_map_shell_surface() to xwayland_surface_associate().
This function doesn't actually "map" the surface in Wayland
parlance, the wl_surface may not have a buffer attached yet.
Always keep it initialized, so that we don't have to check for
xsurface->surface_id.
Will help with WL_SURFACE_SERIAL support, which adds a new way for
a surface to be unpaired.
This allows whatever the user calls from the signal handlers to react to observe
the new state rather than the old, e.g. that a surface is no longer mapped in
the unmap handler.