I'm not sure what this was used for, but it's not used by libwayland.
Setting _WAYLAND_DISPLAY would result in the Wayland backend being
picked but would ignore the actual value of the env variable.
This brings the layer-shell api in line with that of xdg-shell and
avoids reimplementing this function in every compositor in order to
render layer shell popups correctly.
The following information through separate events are added:
- make
- model
- serial_number
This should allow clients to identify a display over different sessions and
load configuration data back.
A note is added that the description should be preferred when representing a
display in UI to users but as a short form for example the model could be used
in this case of course too.
When starting a compositor that's using the "direct" session backend,
wlroots needs to handle calls to `drmSetMaster()` and `drmDropMaster()`.
As both calls used to require `CAP_SYS_ADMIN`, wlroots thus simply
refused starting in case the process doesn't enjoy evelated privileges.
Permission rules have changed since linux.git commit 45bc3d26c95a (drm:
rework SET_MASTER and DROP_MASTER perm handling, 2020-03-19). As a
result, starting with Linux v5.8, both ioctls will now also succeed if
the process is currently or has been the DRM master. And as the first
process to open render nodes will become the DRM master automatically,
this effectively means that process elevation is not strictly required
in all setups anymore.
So let's drop the `geteuid() != 0` permission check to allow those new
rules to do their magic.
Without the casts the bytes accesses get converted to int. but int is
not guaranteed to be 4 bytes large. Even when it is 4 bytes large
`bytes[3] << 24` does not fit because int is signed.
This type is meant to be 4 bytes large as seen in _XcursorReadUInt which
always reads 4 bytes. An unsigned int is often 4 bytes large but this
isnt' guaranteed so it is cleaner to use the exact type we want.
This example was relying on wl_display_dispatch being enough to fetch
output information. This worked by chance.
Add an explicit wl_display_roundtrip.
Other examples don't setup wl_output listeners, so they should be fine.
Fixes: 297354f847 ("Remove unnecessary wl_display_dispatch calls")
Closes: https://github.com/swaywm/wlroots/issues/2386
This event contains a `committed` bitfield, which allows callers to know
which output fields changed during the commit.
This allows users to setup a single atomic commit listener, instead of
setting up one listener for each event (mode, scale, transform, and so
on).
References: https://github.com/swaywm/wlroots/issues/2098
Don't force compositors to check when an empty shape is being renderered.
References #2282. This was motivated by dwl crashing when setting window
borders to 0 (djpohly/dwl#51).
These states are distinct in the time period between the ack_configure
and the next commit on the surface. Splitting these states avoids the
following race for example:
- client starts at 1000x1000
- wlr_xdg_toplevel_set_size 500x500
- size is different -> configure sent
- client acks the configure
- wlr_xdg_toplevel_set_size 1000x1000
- compare_xdg_toplevel_state returns true since there is no pending
configure and the currently committed size is still 1000x1000
- no new configure is sent
- client commits at the size it last acked, 500x500
bad1e9afa8 ("session: Add libseat backend") introduced a change to to
how session backends initialize, but failed to update the FreeBSD
specific version of the direct backend accordingly.
Closes: https://github.com/swaywm/wlroots/issues/2376
get_drm_prop_blob does not set path_len if it returns NULL. Check the
return value before path_len to avoid reading uninitialized memory.
(Granted, this doesn't change the logic at all, but it does make
Valgrind a bit happier.)
Certain clients require this property to be set for expected behavior.
Most notably, steam client CSD maximize button no longer worked
after unmaximizing once, unless the state was changed by another
method. The state is unset whenever another surface gains focus.