A wlr_keyboard_group allows for multiple keyboard devices to be
combined into one logical keyboard. Each keyboard device can only be
added to one keyboard group. This helps with the situation where one
physical keyboard is exposed as multiple keyboard devices. It is up to
the compositors on how they group keyboards together, if at all.
Since a wlr_keyboard_group is one logical keyboard, the keys are a set.
This means that if a key is pressed on multiple keyboard devices, the
key event will only be emitted once, but the internal state will count
the number of devices that the key is pressed on. Likewise, the key
release will not be emitted until the key is released from all devices.
If the compositor wants access to which keys are pressed and released
on each keyboard device, the events for those devices can be listened
to, as they currently are, in addition to the group keyboard's events.
Also, all keyboard devices in the group must share the same keymap. If
the keymap's differ, the keyboard device will not be able to be added
to the group. Once in the group, if the keymap or effective layout for
one keyboard device changes, it will be synced to all keyboard devices
in the group. The repeat info and keyboard modifiers are also synced
If box->width/height is <= 0, the box doesn't contain any points, and so
there is no closest point. wlr_box_closest_point should return NAN in this
case.
In addition, we need to handle empty boxes in a few other
output-layout-related places, because outputs can have size 0x0 when
they are created or destroyed.
Since e26217c51e3a5e1d7dfc95a8a76299e056497981, touchpoints can outlive
surfaces. This works fine as long as the client stays around, but fails
horribly otherwise; therefore we have to make sure that touchpoints don't
outlive their clients.
Fixes#1788
When the surface is closed, we destroy all pending serials waiting to be
accepted. This means we need to ignore any future ack events, because we
can have the following events:
1. -> configure()
2. -> close()
3. <- ack_configure()
At point 3, wlroots will error the client because of invalid serial,
however the client hasn't processed close() yet.
This destroys the xdg popups associated with a layer surface when the
layer surface is unmapped. It does not make sense to keep the popups
open when unmapped.
From the xdg-shell specification:
If the parent is unmapped then its children are managed as
though the parent of the now-unmapped parent has become the
parent of this surface. If no parent exists for the now-unmapped
parent then the children are managed as though they have no
parent surface.
It's added to manager->input_methods list in manager_get_input_method, but
wasn't removed anywhere, leading to possible use-after-free in
wlr_input_method_manager_v2_destroy.
This adds support for xdg-output-unstable-v1 version 3, added in [1].
The xdg_output.done event is now deprecated and is replaced with
wl_output.done.
[1]: 962dd53537
This commit makes more output properties (mode, enabled, scale and transform)
atomic. This means that they are double-buffered and only applied on commit.
Compositors now need to call wlr_output_commit after setting any of those
properties.
Internally, backends still apply properties sequentially. The behaviour should
be exactly the same as before. Future commits will update some backends to take
advantage of the atomic interface. Some backends are non-atomic by design, e.g.
the X11 backend or the legacy DRM backend.
Updates: https://github.com/swaywm/wlroots/issues/1640
This prevents screencopy applications from hanging because a failed
event never got sent when the output was disconnected or disabled after
the call to buffer().
Disconnecting or disabling an output between capture_output() and
ready() could cause either a NULL dereference or an incorrect
attach_render_locks count.
The documentation for wayland-server.h says:
> Use of this header file is discouraged. Prefer including
> wayland-server-core.h instead, which does not include the server protocol
> header and as such only defines the library PI, excluding the deprecated API
> below.
Replacing wayland-server.h with wayland-server-core.h allows us to drop the
WL_HIDE_DEPRECATED declaration.
AFAIK this was always set to zero. Instead, compute wl_output mode flags on the
fly.
Technically this is a breaking change, but I don't think anybody uses this
field.
When the surface is destroyed clear it's reference but wait for the up
event to destroy the touch point via wlr_seat_touch_notify_up().
If the surface is destroyed before the up event we end up with
incomplete sequences sent to the client like
[915821.276] wl_touch@3.down(146, 2475027, wl_surface@38, 0, 236.000000, 515.000000)
[915821.608] wl_touch@3.frame()
[915821.637] wl_touch@3.motion(2475027, 0, 236.000000, 515.000000)
[915821.779] wl_touch@3.frame()
so there's never an up event. While it should be something like
[2461229.051] wl_touch@3.down(81, 3236959, wl_surface@34, 0, 218.000000, 478.000000)
[2461229.435] wl_touch@3.frame()
[2461229.484] wl_touch@3.motion(3236959, 0, 218.000000, 478.000000)
[2461229.636] wl_touch@3.frame()
[2461277.520] wl_touch@3.up(82, 3237007, 0)
[2461277.681] wl_touch@3.frame()
this confuses toolkits intepreting the next down event incorrectly. So
don't destroy the touch point too early.
This change tracks, for each wlr_seat_client, the most recent serial
numbers which were sent to the client. When the client makes a
selection request, wlroots now verifies that the serial number
associated with the selection request was actually provided to that
specific client. This ensures that the client that was most
recently interacted with always has priority for its copy selection
requests, and that no other clients can incorrectly use a larger serial
value and "steal" the role of having the copy selection.
Also, the code used to determine when a given selection is superseded
by a newer request uses < instead of <= to allow clients to make
multiple selection requests with the same serial number and have the
last one hold.
To limit memory use, a ring buffer is used to store runs of sequential
serial numbers, and all serial numbers earlier than the start of the
ring buffer are assumed to be valid. Faking very old serials is
unlikely to be disruptive.
Assuming all clients are correctly written, the only additional
constraint which this patch should impose is that serial numbers
are now bound to seats: clients may not receive a serial number
from an input event on one seat and then use that to request
copy-selection on another seat.
The backend doesn't need to handle transform changes, since everything is done
in software. In fact, all of the implementations were all identical and just
set the transform.
We could add support for hardware transforms, but:
- This would require a different field (something like hardware_transform)
- Not all combinations are possible because there often are hardware
limitations
- The Wayland protocol isn't ready for this (in particular xdg-output, see [1])
This belongs to a different patch series anyway.
[1]: https://patchwork.freedesktop.org/series/52324/
It can be surprising for callers to stash pending changes, commit, get a
failure, then set some other pending changes, commit again, and get another
failure because of the previously-pending changes.
Instead, make commit reset the pending state on failure.
In addition to `button_count`, we keep track of the current buttons
pressed just as in `wlr_keyboard`.
Add `set_add` and `set_remove` to assist with this. These functions can
only be used with values greater than 0 (such as the button/key masks
for keyboards and pointers).
Partially addresses:
- https://github.com/swaywm/wlroots/issues/1716
- https://github.com/swaywm/wlroots/issues/1593