The password entry can be hidden if the user has no password set, but
setting the initial focus to it will result in the entry responding to
the "activate" and signals.
Besides, with the logic that the dialog follows, setting the initial
focus in the entry is redundant, because the focus is also set in the
entry upon showing it.
When a user has no password and a polkit authentication is started,
instead of blindly initiating the admin session, the regular
"Authentication Requested" dialog is shown (but without the password
entry). This means that the user's admin session is only effectively
started after the user chooses to proceed with the authentication which
provides an extra confirmation step that can be vital for critical
tasks.
Ideally we should use a different wording than "authentication" when the
user has no password set, and use "confirmation" instead. However polkit
already sends the requests with such messages (e.g. "Authentication is
required to configure software repositories"), and it's important to
show those to the user, so this patch keeps the regular wording.
These objects created this.actor being the St.Button, and a surrounding
this.container actor that is the actual actor callers care about. Turn this
around and make this.actor be the parent-less actor, and this.keyButton the
contained internal button. This is more consistent with gnome-shell style.
Commit 8fdf47ea5b removed _addKeys(), but forgot one caller. We just want
to regenerate the keyboard for the current group, so call into the
_onGroupChanged function.
While the scale factor is taken into account for app icons, we set
an explicit size when combining the into a folder icon - unless we
take the factor into account, the result will be too small on HiDPI
displays.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=792259
The captured-event handler just redirects focus there on the first keypress,
what it doesn't account for is that other entries may be active while the
Activities overview is opened (eg. alt-f2, or other modal dialogs). Play
along with other entries, and make it only steal focus if no other entry
is selected.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/issues/33Closes: #33
Similar to what has been done for the apps switcher, this allows closing
windows pressing W or F4 while operating the windows switcher popup or
the apps switcher popup while navigating the list of windows for an app.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=620106
This will be mainly useful for closing apps from the applications
switcher, but can be implemented generically enough to select the
nearest existing item after removal if there's any, or destroying
the popup's actor otherwise.
Specifically for the apps switcher, doing this also removes the need
of having to manually either update the current app in AppSwitcher
and highlight it, if there are still any items after the removal, or
simply destroy the AppSwitcher otherwise. Besides, calling _select()
in the handler for item-removed makes sure that the list of thumbnails
in the switcher is always closed, if open, when quitting the app.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=620106
Make sure that the items from the applications switcher and the windows
switcher are removed when the related applications get stopped, or some
of the associated windows closed.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=620106
glibc 2.27 introduced new format specifiers for the month names.
It's obligatory to use them in several languages already and it's
encouraged to use them for all languages because it is not destructive
for any language. As more languages are expected to follow this
standard it's better to use the "%OB" format specifier now so it will
start working correctly automatically.
See also: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=10871
This standard has been also working in BSD and OS X since 1990s,
if anyone tries to use gnome-shell in these systems.
Note: This will not work correctly with glibc < 2.27, there is no
detection whether the system is old or new.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=780957
We keep track of the lock state and restore it on startup to prevent
a crash from bypassing the screen lock. However on wayland, a crash
doesn't result in gnome-session restarting gnome-shell, but brings
down the entire session - that is, restoring the lock state does not
actually protect the existing session in that case, but forces the
user to authenticate twice in order to start the next session. This
is clearly not helpful, so avoid this by not saving the state when
running as wayland compositor.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/merge_requests/17
Align and center the date entry with the workspace's workarea.
This way, maximized applications have their window aligned with the top date
entry.
This doesn't change anything for desktops with no docks or when left/right
workareas are aligned with the monitor.
The offset is leftOffset - rightOffset:
(workArea.x - monitor.x) - (monitor.width - ((workArea.x - monitor.x) +
workArea.width))
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=792354
We will now basically act as "policy provider" for thunderbolt
peripherals by using org.freedesktop.bolt service: when new
devices are connect and session is a unlocked user session
we will automatically enroll (authorize and store in the database)
them.
If new devices are connected but the session is locked a message
will be shown informing the user that the device needs to be
reconnected to properly work.
The org.freedesktop.bolt service is provided by the "bolt" daemon.
Currently the language options displayed pretty much mirror those of the
top bar keyboard layout selection popup. It may make sense in the future
to only list languages, and automatically switch to the enabled IMs that
the OSK can benefit from (eg. by filling in suggestions).
The focused window will move up/down together with the OSK if the focus
area happens to be covered by the area to be covered by the OSK. This
state is reverted whenever the window loses focus, given it wasn't
relayout in between.
IBus was initially made optional as gnome-shell depended on too
recent API. This API is now old enough and gnome-shell is committing
further to IBus by implementing a ClutterInputMethod through it.
Let's just make IBus a mandatory dependency, instead of making code
paths trickier to cater for situations where it's missing.
We do not need the parent Keyboard object to handle those specially, the
code can be self-contained enough. The Key object will simply emit
pressed/released events containing the keycode/string, be it from the
parent key or one contained in the BoxPointer.
StIMText used to handle key events for IM consumption in the capture phase,
this made the search box work automagically with nothing explicitly focusing
it. Since it's no longer the case, it has to be done somewhere.
Instead of manually resizing each key everytime the keyboard needs to
relayout, have a special grid container that will preserve aspect when
resized.
This actor works in two stages though, first the keys need to be added
and then layoutButtons() need to be called for the actors to be
reparented to the container with the right attachment options.
This is a ClutterInputMethod implementation using IBus underneath. The
input method will interact with the currently focused ClutterInputFocus,
be it shell chrome or wayland clients through the text_input protocol.
The keys possibly need resizing after a (new) layer has been set, there's
however calling places that don't. Instead, fold this._redraw() into
setActiveLayer().
Getting the necessary "setting enabled, or input from touchscreen"
conditions to have the OSK shown are not enough on the lack of a
current focus. As we are setting up the caret tracker here, wait for
the focus in event before showing the keyboard.
This fixes 2 issues, with the setting disabled it became really hard
to get the OSK hidden on eg. touchscreen->pointer device switches,
as visibility only depended on the a11y setting here. And secondly,
enabling the setting would always end up with the OSK being shown
regardless of focus, while it should stay hidden if there's no text
edition.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=788188
If the underlying X11 input driver creates multiple devices from a single
device node, we may end up picking up the wrong device. So, instead of
picking the first device based on node and bailing out if it's not a pad,
pick the first pad that has that device node, and bail out if there is
none.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/issues/10Closes: #10
It turns out that NetworkManager does export the directory as pkg-config
variable after all, so use that instead of building the path ourselves
from the prefix.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=789811
We want touch events to enable the keyboard and focus tracking, but
not to actually show it right away. Implement that behavior by only
changing the visibility of the keyboard when triggered by a GSettings
change.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=788188
We enable the keyboard when it is either enabled explicitly via
a11y settings or when using a touch device. We'll soon want to
special-case changes to the GSettings, so track its value in a
dedicated property.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=788188
When the agent doesn't work (e.g. when the screen is locked), it shouldn't be
registered with NM. Otherwise it will keep cancelling the requests that
could happily be serviced with system secrets.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=789811
The native agent already forgets about the request at the point it's
serviced and the further attempt to use it (e.g. cancel it when the screen
is locked) will trigger an assertion failure:
** (gnome-shell:30862): CRITICAL **: shell_network_agent_respond: assertion 'request != NULL' failed
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=789811
Show a dialog informing the user each time the keyboard accessibility
flags are changed by one of the clutter backends (either from toggle
keys or two-keys-off modifiers).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=788564