If the user clicks a trayicon in the overview, drop out of the
overview before passing the click on to the icon. (We have to actually
wait for the overview animation to complete, in case the icon wants to
get a pointer grab, which it would not be able to do with the overview
active.)
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=641853
If the pointer moves on or off the stage while another process has a
grab, we will lose track of it. One example of this is that if you use
a popup menu from a message tray trayicon, the tray will stay up after
the menu goes away, because the shell never saw the pointer leave it.
Add a new method shell_global_sync_pointer() that causes clutter to
recheck what actor is under the pointer and generate leave/enter
events if appropriate.
Of course, we can't actually tell for sure when another process has a
grab, so we need a heuristic of when to call this. Currently we call
it from Chrome._windowsRestacked(), which is not really the right
thing at all, but does fix the menu-from-trayicon case...
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=630842
If the user clicks on the title of a trayicon's SummaryItem, forward
that click to the trayicon. Also adjust
gnome_shell_plugin_xevent_filter() so that if the trayicon takes a
grab as a result of this, we don't hide the message tray.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=630842
If you run a command from Alt+F2 that tries to get a server grab (eg,
xmag), it will fail if it starts up before the run dialog is finished
hiding.
Additionally, the run dialog currently stays focused while it is
fading out, potentially stealing keystrokes (or causing the user to
accidentally launch two copies of a program).
Change ModalDialog.close() to call popModal() immediately
Add a ModalDialog.popModal method, and call that before running the
RunDialog command. If the command succeeds, close the dialog as
before. If it fails, call ModalDialog.pushModal() to put things back
to normal before displaying the error.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=644857
When right-clicking on an AppWellIcon, the icon will become focused,
which (presumably via style-changed) invalidates its current
allocation, causing "icon.y" to return 0 until it has been
reallocated, messing up our idea of where in the AppDisplay the icon
is. Work around this by calling get_allocation_box() instead.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=645162
If there is a monitor to the right it is very easy to overshot the
expanding thumbnails and enter the next monitor. So, in that case
we just always show it.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=641877
Specify x-fill and y-fill true for the bin that contains the status
icon so the status icon will always be sized to our specified icon
size (24x24). This prevents pathological behavior for legacy status
icons embedded in the tray where an initial allocation at 1x1 before
they had content would "stick", and the icon would permanently
end up 1x1.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=634820
StButton was mistakenly considering any Space/Enter KEY_RELEASE to be
a click, when in fact it should only count as a click if it also got
the corresponding KEY_PRESS as well. This meant that when typing in a
chat notification, any Space/Enter keypress would dismiss the
notification, since the StEntry would take the PRESS event but ignore
the RELEASE, allowing it to propagate to the notification itself,
which would treat it as a click.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=645243
Right now, the user status menu always contains actions to logout
and lock the screen, and the user switching action only depends on
the technical availability of the functionality.
All those items should honor the lockdown settings defined in
org.gnome.desktop.lockdown.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=645335
Alt+F2 restart was failing after a rebuild when running from the
source tree because it would try to restart
".libs/lt-gnome-shell-real", which didn't exist yet. Fix this by using
"libtool --mode=execute" at build time to regenerate that file.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=645390
To avoid having hot corners that accidentally trigger when e.g. trying
to hit the panel on the primary monitor we add hot corners only to
monitors that are "naturally" top left (top right for RTL).
For instance, we'd like a hot corner here:
corner -> +-------------
| |
+---------+ |
|=========| |
| | |
| | |
| | |
+---------+------------+
But not here:
unexpected hot corner
↓
+---------+-------+
|=========| |
| | |
| +-------+
+---------+
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=645116
The fade effect when switching tabs should only be applied when
switching from a previously selected tab, not when selecting the
initial one - otherwise, the window previews are faded in the first
time the overview is shown.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=644389
When we were knocking off workspace height to fix the ratio problems, we
weren't adding spacing in between workspaces, so they smooshed up against
each other whenever we took height off, causing them to be visible.
Different methos are being used to launch the control-center panels of each
status icon. Standarize on Shell.AppSystem.
This also fixes the network icon using a non-existant Util.spawnDesktop()
method.
Bug #645091
It apparently is unlikely that anongit access will be restored
to clutter-project.org. We'll update the moduleset again when
alternate hosting is found.
Commit fcfd17e was overzealous when simplifying the previous spinner
animation, as a result the spinner now stays around when switching
to another application while the animation is ongoing.
If a workspace becomes empty due to a window changing to/from the
primary monitor, but not changing its original workspace then we
were not noticing this. This can happen for instance if you drag
a thumbnail window to a non-primary window.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=609258