Back in the day, there was a proposed system of tracking apps in a
specific context.
The inspiration was that you may have used apps in multiple modes:
Firefox may have been used in both "Programmer Reference" and
"Kitten Videos" contexts. Early user response to the feedback wasn't
too positive - context switching is something that humans have trouble
doing implicitly, let alone explicitly. The old codebase still has a
few remnants of this around; let's finally put them to rest.
Note that we still write out a dummy context tag to the XML file - old
versions of the shell will flat out crash if you don't have one of those
in there, so just leave it in for compatibility sake.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=673767
The pending-charge state means AC power is on but the battery is not
being charged. This can happen because its charge is above a certain
threshold, to avoid short charging cycles and prolong the battery's
life, or because the PSU is not powerful enough to charge the batteries.
Instead of lying to the user about something being estimated, we should
simply tell the truth and set the label to "Not Charging".
Closes: #701.
When we started to only show a single caption at a time, we allowed
title captions to be wider than their corresponding window preview.
But while overlapping neighboring previews is fine, we shouldn't
allow the captions to leak outside the workspace area itself and
overlap unrelated elements like workspace switcher or dash.
This partly reverts commit b3b30f239d.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/merge_requests/214
Instead of defaulting to a natural scroll behavior,
have the workspace switch action use the natural-scroll setting
in org.gnome.peripherals.touchpad to determine the correct
direction of travel when swiping. 4 finger swipes will then
match the behavior of the rest of the UI.
Reference: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/issues/516
While this sounds counter-intuitive, the image-path hint value might also
be used with URIs or icon names.
As per freedesktop standard:
The "app_icon" parameter and "image-path" hint should be either an URI
(file:// is the only URI schema supported right now) or a name in a
freedesktop.org-compliant icon theme (not a GTK+ stock ID).
Thus the image-path hint should also be parsed as it happens for the
app_icon.
Reuse same logic, by falling back on _iconForNotificationData with the
hint value.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/merge_requests/285
We have a callback that will call close() when the notification is
destroyed, and a callback that will call destroy() on the notification
when the message is closed.
Currently, if the notification is destroyed we'll execute our callback
that will call again destroy() on the notification. That's bad
practice in general, and it also has the side effect of resetting the
destroy reason.
This commit avoids re-destroying the notification by dropping the
notification reference on destroy.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/merge_requests/258
Differently from the fd.o notifications, Gtk notifications do not
have a mechanism to update themselves. Instead, when a new
notification is received for an ID already known to the notification
daemon, the old notification is dismissed and a replaced with a new
one.
Currently though, there is no way to distinguish a notification that
was dismissed because of an user interaction, or because it was
replaced. That is an useful piece of information, so add a new value
to the NotificationDestroyedReason enum to account for it.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/merge_requests/258
When gnome-shell receives the signal of 'set-content-type' from ibus,
gnome-shell calls KeyboardManager.holdKeyboard() and
KeyboardManager.releaseKeyboard() and the functions change the current
input focus in GNOME Xorg and it could result in closing a popup window
which has a password entry by focusing on the entry.
The solution is to stop to call the APIs on 'set-content-type' signal.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/issues/391
We don't usually show notification banners while the monitor is in
fullscreen, but when we do - the notification is urgent - we should
actually show the banner, even if the top-most window is unredirected.
To achieve that, disable unredirection while the banner is showing.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/issues/430
The `reactive` property of icon actors was being restored multiple times
over the course of the pulse animation, all at slightly different times
as each icon finished animating at different times.
The problem is that toggling `reactive` on an `StWidget` incurs a style
change of the `insensitive` pseudo class, and style changes would quickly
queue relayouts incurring full stage reallocation. This occurred many times
during a pulse animation, limiting its smoothness and performance.
The solution is to not toggle the `reactive` property in the pulse
animation at all, which avoids incurring multiple full stage relayouts.
As a bonus, this means the icon under the cursor pulses with the correct
selection highlight, appearing more seamless and responsive.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/merge_requests/261
The `reactive` property of icon actors was being restored 24 times over
the course of the spring animation, all at slightly different times as
each icon finished animating at different times.
The problem is that toggling `reactive` on an `StWidget` incurs a style
change of the `insensitive` pseudo class, and style changes would quickly
queue relayouts incurring full stage reallocation. This occurred many times
during a spring animation hogging the CPU and limiting the frame rate.
The solution is defer and batch the cleanup for all icons until after the
last icon has finished animating. This way the CPU impact of the style
change and stage relayout isn't felt during the animation so the frame
rate remains higher and smoother. The overall CPU usage of the animation
is also reduced as the remaining relayouts are much more likely to be
grouped into a single frame.
Icon spring animation performance on an i7-7700:
Before: 83% CPU and 47 FPS
After : 78% CPU and 54 FPS
which is about a 22% increase in performance per clock (FPS/CPU).
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/merge_requests/253
The switcher popup is a large, mostly transparent actor that
should cover all the clickable area of GNOME Shell. In Clutter
terms, it should cover the whole stage.
By binding it to the primary monitor, the Alt+Tab behavior
becomes a bit inconsistent. For example, by not hiding when
clicking at empty spaces at other monitors.
Fix that by binding the SwitcherPopup to the whole stage,
and not only the primary monitor.
Fixes https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/issues/647
If no password or a wrong password is entered after automounting an
encrypted device, then the password should be reasked. However, this
does not happen because the relevant udisks error messages for this
cases are missing in the exception handler that calls _reaskPassword.
Fix this issue by adding the relevant udisks error strings to the
exception handling in the _onVolumeMounted method.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/issues/640
Fix a regression causing the portal helper to crash.
In 94423151b2 we moved the dbus interface
descriptions into seperate files which is why we had to include the
fileUtils js module. This module imports the params js module, so add
params.js to the gresources file for the portal helper.
We currently only ignore minimized windows, not windows that are
hidden for other reasons - namely on wayland windows are initially
hidden until they are placed.
This fixes a flicker in the transparent top bar on wayland when the
"position" of an unplaced window wrongly suggests the window is
overlapping the top bar.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/issues/693
Since we started to show OSD windows on all monitors, OSD windows are
destroyed when the corresponding monitor is disconnected. We shouldn't
leave any signal handlers around in that case - they prevent the object
from being garbage collected, and trigger warnings for accessing proper-
ties of invalidated GObjects.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/issues/602
When maxLevel is > 100%, first OSD appearance was capping the current
level to 100%. Consecutives key press were then OK.
Ensure we setMaxLevel before setting Level itself, so that correct cap
value is applied.
App folder popups take a grab when opened, and as we don't pass any
particular pushModal() parameters, all keybindings are blocked. While
this makes sense for most keybindings that would interfere with the
popup interaction, others like volume/brightness keys or screenshots
can be allowed safely.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/issues/648
Add exception to handle a keypress if numlock is enabled as we already do for
capslock. This uses Clutter.ModifierType.MOD2_MASK because at the moment there
is not a more explicit way to refer to the numlock mask.
Fixes: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/issues/550
Instead of taking care of the PanelMenu.ButtonBox.container
destruction by itself, delegate that to the very object that
created it in the first place: PanelMenu.ButtonBox itself.
This is the last remaining usage of Shell.GenericContainer
in the codebase, and posed small challenges compared to the
other removals.
A new St.Widget subclass called InputSourceIndicatorContainer
was added as a replacement to the Shell.GenericContainer. It
was needed because GNOME Shell needs to override the regular
size allocation functions, but InputSourceIndicator already
is a St.Widget with its own size allocation overrides.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/merge_requests/153
Because we're late in the cycle, and don't know how many
extensions actually rely on this API, this commit adds
back the BoxPointer.show() and .hide() functions, with
warning messages to notify consumers that this is going
to be removed.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/merge_requests/153
Pretty much like dd4709bb2, BoxPointer's show() and hide()
functions will clash with Clutter.Actor's ones.
In addition to that, on a conceptual level, the current API
is not great, because calling boxPointer.hide() won't result
in boxPointer.actor.visible == false.
For these reasons, rename show() and hide() to open() and
close(). A compatibility layer will be added in a following
commit, warning about the usage of show() and hide().
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/merge_requests/153
LayoutManager is currently a pure JavaScript class that
relies on the rudimentary Signals.addSignalMethods() to
handle signals. This is an inefficient implementation of
one of the most central classes in GNOME Shell.
In addition to removing Shell.GenericContainer, then,
turn LayoutManager into a proper GObject.Object subclass.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/merge_requests/153
In the next commit, we will turn PanelMenu.ButtonBox into a
St.Widget subclass. As a domino effect, PanelMenu.Button will
become one too, and so will Panel.AppMenuButton.
When that happens, the current show() and hide() functions in
Panel.AppMenuButton will clash with Clutter.Actor's ones.
To avoid that, rename these functions to fadeIn() and fadeOut()
and avoid a name clash.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/merge_requests/153
This is another straight port from Shell.GenericContainer.
The important thing to notice is that the calculation is
broken if the StThemeNode helpers (adjust_preferred_* and
adjust_for_*) aren't used.
The downside of this patch is that it removed the skip_paint
from the thumbnails. Keeping it would add an unecessarily
large amount of code.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/merge_requests/153
Removing Shell.GenericContainer from the IconGrid class was
challenging because it needs the "skip paint" API from it.
This API was added, too, as a workaround to the inability
to override vfuncs from GJS.
The overrides are largely copy-pasted and translated versions
of the Shell.GenericContainer code.
The IconGrid:key-focus-in signal was renamed to :child-focused
to avoid clashing with ClutterActor:key-focus-in.
In GridSearchResults, the internal IconGrid had it's y_expand
set to false, so it doesn't push other search elements (the
list results mainly) to the bottom of the screen.
Because skip paint wasn't and still isn't a GObject property,
rename it to _skipPaint to reflect that.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/merge_requests/153
As part of our quest to obsolete Shell.GenericContainer, IconGrid will
become a Clutter.Actor subclass. As the ::key-focus-in signal would
clash with Clutter.Actor::key-focus-in, rename it to ::child-focused.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/merge_requests/153
DashItemContainer currently animates the scale and opacity
of its child when zooming in. This is visible when adding
a new favorite item to the dash; the items will zoom in from
the center.
After the previous commit, however, the zoom animation got
slightly broken, and looked like the icon was coming from
the bottom instead of the center.
Fix that by setting the scale and opacity of DashItemContainer
itself, instead of its child. Remove the unused code after that
too.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/merge_requests/153
Pretty much like the previous patches, this extends St.Bin. The
most interesting aspect of this patch is that most of the sizing
routines of the icons is now delegated to the actors and layout
managers, removing quite a bunch of code.
The 'spacing' theme property is now redirected to StBoxLayout's
spacing property. Also adjust the Dash code to stop forcing a
potentially invalid width in the first icon too.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/merge_requests/153
This commit removes all the uses of Shell.GenericContainer from
SwitcherPopup.SwitcherList. Compared to the other patches, this
one was specially trickier to get right, and a few invasive
changes needed to be done.
The most noticeable one is that the allocation of the items is
done entirely by St.BoxLayout -- we don't manually allocate them
anymore. To make it work, get_preferred_width() had to calculate
the correct value. It now assumes that:
* Minimum width: the minimum width of the widest child.
* Natural width: the minimum width of the StBoxLayout (use it
instead of the natural width to force the labels to ellipsize
when too long.)
The AppIcon class became a St.Widget subclass as well, to override
get_preferred_width() and be able to keep the squared shape.
Besides that, add a new SwitcherButton class to reimplement squared
icons without having to resort to hacks in the size allocation
machinery. This class has a single vfunc override to ensure that it
is squared when the SwitcherList is.
The arrows indicating multiple windows are now in this._list
actor to the SwitcherPopup itself, since this._list automatically
manages its own children now.
At last, adapt (but preserve) the hack in CyclerPopup.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/merge_requests/153
Instead of overriding vfunc_get_preferred_width|height(), use the
already available Layout.MonitorConstraint to bind SwitcherPopup
to the primary monitor.
This commit turns SwitcherPopup.SwitcherPopup into a St.Widget
subclass, and gets rid of Shell.GenericContainer usage. Subclasses
were adapted to that too.
This class introduced a new challenge: it overrides show(). As per
discussions, we now call this.visible = true inside show().
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/merge_requests/153
In the process of purging all usages of Shell.GenericContainer
of GNOME Shell, one specific problematic situation that might
occur is when classes have functions that would clash with any
ClutterActor or StWidget function name.
One of such example is SwitcherPopup.destroy(). Right now, this
class is a pure JavaScript class that wraps a real actor, but
soon this will change, and it'll become a St.Widget subclass.
Another problem with functions that mimic the toolkit ones is
the predictability of them; after calling destroy(), that widget
is expected to not be available anymore. In SwitcherPopup case,
it is still available for a short while. In this case, that's not
a big problem, but the show() and hide() functions in other clases
are more problematic because the actor's visibility does not
follow that.
This commit is a first step in cleaning that up, and changes the
SwitcherPopup.destroy() to fadeAndDestroy().
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/merge_requests/153
Shell.GenericContainer exposes the size negotiation machinery
through the use of signals. Signals are not specially performant.
One of the reasons is that they acquire a global lock for signal
handlers lookup. GNOME Shell has more than 2,000 actors at any
given point in time, up to 20 levels deep in hierarchy, making
size negotiation and painting non-trivial tasks. Such a critical
section of Clutter's machinery shouldn't rely on signals
whatsoever.
Regardless of that, Shell.GenericContainer is a workaround to
a non-existing issue anymore. It shouldn't be used anyway, and
any performance improvements that removing it can potentially
yield are bonuses to it.
This commit starts this work by removing Shell.GenericContainer
usage from Panel.Panel class. The class now extends St.Widget,
and as such, it has no "this.actor" field set anymore. A couple
of places where this actor field was used are adjuste as well.
It is important to notice that we now allocate the Panel itself
inside vfunc_allocate(). This was previously done before emitting
the signal by Shell.GenericContainer.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/merge_requests/153
ClutterVirtualInputDevice has the limitation that event flags won't be
made to contain CLUTTER_EVENT_FLAG_INPUT_METHOD, possibly causing feedback
loops.
As the event gets injected up the platform dependent bits, we can avoid
care on not pressing the same key twice, we still expect coherence between
key presses and releases from the IM though.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/issues/531
When adding a favorite, we add the ID to the list of favorites, save the
setting and add the new app to the favorites map. However as writing the
settings value already results in reload() to update the favorites map,
the new app is usually already in the map when we add it.
The only exception is when the ID was found in the RENAMED_DESKTOP_IDS map,
in which case we end up adding both the renamed app and the original one.
Fix this by simply relying on reload() to properly update the map, just like
we already do in _removeFavorite().
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/issues/471
On X11, reactive chrome must be added to the input region in order
to work as expected. However that region works independently from
any window stacking, with the result that the unresponsive-app dialog
currently blocks all input in the "covered" area, even in windows
stacked above the unresponsive window.
The correct fix would be to track the unobscured parts of the dialog
and set the input region from that, but that's quite cumbersome. So
instead, only track chrome when the corresponding window is focused
(or the dialog itself of course).
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/issues/273
As a mount operation's UI may be reused (for example after mistyping
the password), we only close the operation once the mount has finished
(successfully or with error).
We therefore need to track ongoing operations, which we currently do
by monkey-patching the corresponding volume object. However while the
underlying GVolume object indeed remains the same through-out the
operation, the JS wrapper object isn't referenced anywhere and may
thus be garbage collected, resulting in a stuck dialog.
Fix this issue by tracking active operations explicitly, so that all
involved objects are referenced until the end of the operation.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/issues/565
Whenever a command runs in the run dialog, it
will be added to the history unless it is
already the last entry. This does not apply
for entries that are not consecutive, which can
result in long chains of commands which
alternate, e.g. lg, r, lg, r, lg, r. Not only is
this wasteful in terms of space, but also
inconsistent with how history works elsewhere,
e.g. in the shell.
Therefore, remove entries in the history that are
equal to the one that will be added to the end of
of the history when the entry already exists.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/issues/524
The `hints` and `settingName` parameters to the agent call may define
the specific list of secrets NM actually needs from the user. This
seems to have been the intended use of these two parameters but only
recently did NM with the IWD backend start to use this to request 802.1x
secrets. So if `hints` is provided, ask user for the specific secrets
listed there and don't even look at what type of EAP method is in use.
Only the three types of secrets actually in use by NM's IWD backend are
supported for now -- they happen to be the same three that
_get8021xSecrets() had already supported.
This attribute was previously only assigned in show(). hide() compares
this attribute to 0. If hide() is called before show() is first called,
the comparison would give the correct result (undefined > 0 is false)
but log a warning:
JS WARNING: [resource:///org/gnome/shell/ui/workspacesView.js 529]:
reference to undefined property "_restackedNotifyId"
Initialize this attribute in _init(), alongside _scrollEventId and
_keyPressEventId which are also used in hide().
dialogContent is set to one of the elements of the list DialogContent,
but not all of those have a checkBoxText property. When logging out (as
opposed to shutting down), this causes a warning:
JS WARNING: [resource:///org/gnome/shell/ui/endSessionDialog.js
763]: reference to undefined property "checkBoxText"
(The line number corresponds to this line in 3.28.3.)
The warning is apparently not triggered if the undefined property is
used as part of a boolean expression:
gjs> var x = {};
gjs> x.a;
typein:2:1 strict warning: reference to undefined property "a"
gjs> if (x.b) { log('oh no'); }
gjs> x.c || ''
""
_setCheckBoxLabel() just checks the truthiness of its 'text' argument,
and the empty string is false-y, so passing '' rather than undefined has
no functional effect.
In recent Fedora 29, connecting to wifi access points from the
user menu (top-right menu) does not work. Clicking the 'Connect'
button just animates it but does nothing else. The logs show an
error "JS ERROR: Error: Expected type utf8 for Argument
'specific_object' but got type 'undefined'".
Looking into this, it seems the problem is these uses of the
`path` property of an NMAccessPoint. NMAccessPoint inherits
from NMObject, and NMObject *does* have a path property:
https://developer.gnome.org/libnm/stable/NMObject.html#NMObject--path
so at first glance this seems fine. But I poked around a bit
using libnm via Python (which goes via introspection, just like
this JS code does), and found that indeed AccessPoint objects
don't seem to have a `path` property there either.
Looking at the libnm code, this actually makes sense, because
the property is marked "(skip)":
https://github.com/NetworkManager/NetworkManager/blob/master/libnm/nm-object.c#L1291
and the introspection docs suggest that means it should be left
out of introspected output:
https://wiki.gnome.org/Projects/GObjectIntrospection/Annotations#Symbol_visibility
I'm a bit concerned that this was only found recently - whereas
the change to use `.path` in gnome-shell dates from October 2017
(d71af5e5) and the property has been marked (skip) in NM since
at least 2016 - but this all seems to add up. The obvious fix is
to replace use of `.path` with `.get_path()`, which returns the
path and is *not* marked (skip) and so *is* available via
introspection. I tested that this works in Python and also did
a test build of gnome-shell with this change and installed it on
an affected system, it does seem to fix the bug.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
gjs's D-Bus convenience explicitly expects a string representation
of an interface, but the new convenience method to load an XML
description from a resource introduced in commit f42d9df3e0 only
returns a string when using gjs from the GNOME 3.30 release. We
have so far managed to keep compatibility with the previous stable
gjs release, so fix up the fallback code to cast to string.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/issues/578
Commit dbf993300a moved all inline D-Bus interface descriptions to template
strings so we can stop escaping line breaks.
Unfortunately that unveiled a grave bug in xgettext, which currently cannot
handle files that contain both backtick and slash characters - as a result,
translations from affected files have started to disappear as translators
run xgettext/msgmerge.
Instead of reverting the change and getting the crusty escaping back, we
will take this as an opportunity to stop inlining the XML altogether and
load it from a resource instead.
To facilitate that, add a small helper method that loads a D-Bus interface
description from a dedicated resource bundle.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/issues/537
In GNOME-3.24, pressing Super+P or a similar function key would cause
a switch to the next available monitor configuration.
However, in GNOME-3.26, this was reimplemented in mutter and gnome-shell
and the behaviour is now different: pressing Super+P and releasing will
cause no change in montor configuration[1]. In this new design you have
to press Super+P and keep holding Super in order to keep the switcher
open, then press P again (or use the arrow keys or mouse) to
select the next one in the list.
This is incompatible with many Asus products such as Asus X530UN, where
pressing the presentation mode media key (Fn+F8) actually generates
the following keypress events from the keyboard controller:
Fn pressed: nothing
F8 pressed: nothing
F8 released: Super press, p press, p release, Super release (quick burst)
Fn released: nothing
With this firmware behaviour it's not possible to hold the keys and have
the dialog come up so that you can select another new mode.
To solve this, when the switcher is opened, select the next available
display config by default, which is more similar to the pre-GNOME-3.26
behaviour. Now pressing Fn+F8 on this laptop will result in the display
mode switch taking place.
[1]: The mentioned desired behaviour will at least happen after
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/issues/281 has been fixed
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/merge_requests/208
Since we always keep the active workspace until the user switches
to a different one, we may end up with two empty workspaces at
the end. It's not obvious to users why this happens, and there's
indeed no good reason for the behavior - just remove the trailing
workspace in that case.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/issues/536
Meta.ScreenDirection no longer exists. This fixes window menus on
multi-monitor systems.
JS ERROR: TypeError: Meta.ScreenDirection is undefined
_buildMenu@resource:///org/gnome/shell/ui/windowMenu.js:135:17
`NMConnectionDevice._sync()` is responsible for setting up the active
connection that we'll end up displaying. It expects the active
connection to already be in a map `_connectionItems`. If it isn't in
there, we get a null dereference and the indicator can get into a weird
state where it doesn't display devices / connections properly.
Let's change this expectation. If there is an active connection,
`_deviceAdded()` will eventually get to it and call `_sync()` to set up
the active connection state. We make `_sync()` tolerate there being no
active connection when it's called.
Closes: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/issues/140
We must remove the GFile reference from the representing object when an
extension has been unloaded as this won't be used anymore later (e.g. as cached
ref).
Throw an error using an informative message in case a mode uses a stylesheet
that can't be loaded, instead of crashing later because the theming can't be
properly computed, and thus the minimum size of the actors.
We currently assign the stylesheet to an extension whenever the file exists,
regardless of whether it actually loaded successfully or not.
And thus we load an extension that ships a stylesheet even if that file can't
be used.
There is no point in trying to load an extension if its stylesheet wasn't
loaded in the first place, so make sure this happens only on success.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/merge_requests/188
Ensure that the search provider operations (just getResultMetas requests
in the current implementation) in progress are properly cancelled when we
clear the UI, otherwise returned results might still be added when not
needed.
This is triggered for each provider by the SearchResults reset.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/merge_requests/205
Currently when the overview is hidden, any pending search is kept alive,
not only at remote search provider level (as per issue #183), but even
the shell providers proxies continue to get and process data. This happens
even if this is not needed anymore, while the UI reset is performed only
next time that the overview is shown (causing some more computation
presentation time).
In order to stop this to happen, when the overview is hidden, we have to
unset the search entry to an empty value as this would make SearchResults
to have empty terms list and that would make the proxies cancellable to
be triggered (without causing any further search to start).
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/merge_requests/205
If the volume is removed before AUTORUN_EXPIRE_TIMEOUT_SECS seconds, we can stop
the timeout earlier as there's nothing to unset, while the volume instance
won't be valid anymore.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=791233
The _sync function for Message only updates the close button visibility,
so we can safely stop doing that if the close button get get destroyed earlier
(as it happens when clicking on it).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=791233
We need to avoid that we use the _dragActor instance after that it has
been destroyed or we'll get errors. We now set it to null when this
happens, protecting any access to that.
Add a DragState enum-like object to keep track of the state
instead of using booleans.
Remove duplicated handler on 'destroy' and just use a generic one.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=791233
The object manager tries to synthesize interface removal
events if the bus name of a remote object drops off the bus.
The code had bad typos in it, though: it reuses the `i`
index variable in its inner loop, where it should be using
the `j` index variable.
This commit corrects the i/j confusion.
The object manager tries to synthesize interface removal
events if the bus name of a remote object drops off the bus.
The code has a bad typo in it, though: it confuses `objectPaths`
(the list of all object paths) and `objectPath` (the object
currently being processed this iteration of the loop).
That leads to a failure to synthesize the interface removal
events, and spew in the log.
This commit corrects the objectPath/objectPaths confusion.
Previously mutter listened to Xsettings (via GTK) to get notified
whether the shell showed the app menu. After X11 support was changed in
the direction of being less central, listening to this particular
Xsettings were removed with the intention of having the Shell tell
mutter directly whether it was showing the menu or not.
This commit makes that happen. It still travels through Xsettings (still
via Gtk), as the shell still gets that state from Xsettings, but fixing
this is out of scope for this particular fix.
Closes: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/issues/276
Flag some actors that are good candidates for caching in texture memory
(what Clutter calls "offscreen redirect"), thereby mostly eliminating
their repaint overhead.
This isn't exactly groundbreaking, it's how you're meant to use
OpenGL in the first place. But the difficulty is in the design of
Clutter which has some peculiarities making universal caching
inefficient at the moment:
* Repainting an offscreen actor is measurably slower than repainting
the same actor if it was uncached. But only by less than 100%,
so if an actor can avoid changing every frame then caching is usually
more efficient over that timeframe.
* The cached painting from a container typically includes its children,
so you can't cache containers whose children are usually animating at
full frame rate. That results in a performance loss.
This could be remedied in future by Clutter explicitly separating a
container's background painting from its child painting and always
caching the background (as StWidget tries to in some cases already).
So this commit selects just a few areas where caching has been verified
to be beneficial, and many use cases now see their CPU usage halved:
One small window active...... 10% -> 7% (-30%)
...under a panel menu........ 23% -> 9% (-61%)
One maximized window active.. 12% -> 9% (-25%)
...under a panel menu........ 23% -> 11% (-52%)
...under a shell dialog...... 22% -> 12% (-45%)
...in activities overview.... 32% -> 17% (-47%)
(on an i7-7700)
Also a couple of bugs are fixed by this:
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=792634https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=792633
Instead of consuming the event in front of the input method. Enter
is sometimes overriden by those, so it seems better to let the IM
handle the key event, and react later to it if it got propagated
anyway. That is what ::activate does, so use this signal.
This used to work before ClutterInputMethod/InputFocus because the
IM received the events directly from stage captured events. This
is not the case anymore.
Closes: #440
We used to keep the workspace switcher slid out when the user made use
of workspaces. This was changed in commit 2d84975 to give more space
to window previews, but it turned out to make the switcher quite a lot
more difficult to interact with (rather than only being a question of
discoverability). So go back to the previous behavior.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/merge_requests/161
During global grabs, actors miss enter and leave events required
for correct hover tracking. This can cause the workspace switcher
to get stuck while slid out, so ensure the actor's hover state is
synced after drag operations.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/merge_requests/161
Using a single resource file for all JS sources saves a couple of
build system instructions, but has some serious downsides:
- bundling the entire shell code with the tools blows
up their size unnecessarily
- the tools are rebuilt unnecessarily for any shell
code change
Autotools was painful enough to let this slip, but with meson we
don't have any excuses - using the actual dependencies speeds up
the build a tiny bit and reduces the tools' sizes from over 2M
to about 50k.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/merge_requests/192
We show a cover pane on top of the overview during transitions to
prevent issues caused by clicks and mouseover events when the overview
is not ready. Right now, this pane is only being shown on the primary
monitor, which obviosly allows interactions to happen before the
animations are finished on the secondary monitors.
To fix this, use the size of the whole stage for the cover pane.
Emitting it that soon results in JS warnings, as we don't have
everything in place yet. The position-changed signal will be
emitted from other locations as soon as we have it.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/issues/464Closes: #464
When trying to close a window in the overview by clicking the close
button and the window doesn't get closed but a dialog is added to the
window afterwards, we close the overview and show the dialog.
Instead of adding a separate listener for the window-added signal to the
WindowOverlay, let the WindowClones remember that the close button was
pressed and activate themselves if a dialog is added after that.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/merge_requests/180
When a dialog is added to a window while the overview is shown, we get
its parent using get_transient_for() so we can add it to the right
window clone.
If we have multiple layers of dialogs we have to do this recursively
until we find the root ancestor. This case currently results in an
infinite loop: Since parent is always set to the same window, the
while-condition will always be true.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/merge_requests/180
For the OSD, all parameters except for the icon are optional - if the
caller doesn't include the 'label' option, the OSD won't show a label
etc.
While this makes sense for an API, it means that we have to be careful
to correctly differentiate an option that was omitted and an option
that has a 'falsy' value like false or 0.
Unfortunately since commit ccaae5d3c we no longer do, with the result
that OSDs meant for the first monitor will show up on all, and a level
of 0 is presented as no level bar instead of an empty one, whoops.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=791669
GSettings now recognizes per-desktop overrides that can be used
to change schemas' default values for a particular desktop. This
is not entirely unlike our existing custom override mechanism in
mutter, except that it is not limited to keys in org.gnome.mutter,
and it doesn't require a separate schema - the latter means that
we (and gnome-teak-tool) no longer have to figure out the correct
schema for the current login session and just use the original one.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=786496
Show an overamplified volume icon if volume is louder the max normalized one.
Use a similar logic as gnome-settings-daemon to delimit values, restricted
to output.
The purpose is to help users remember that visiting some websites or
using some apps can get LOUD.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=790280.
Implement for barLevel an overdrive area. This is a zone represented via a
different styling to indicate that you are bypassing the normal zone of
a given level, without reaching yet the maximum limit.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=790280.
Depending on hardware and recorded volume level, turning up the speakers
to the maximum volume may not be enough and the user will want to amplify
the volume above 100%. Currently this requires opening the sound Settings
panel which gets cumbersome when required repeatedly.
To support this case better, allow raising the sound volume above 100%
directly from the system menu if the feature is enabled via the
`allow-volume-above-100-percent` key in `org.gnome.desktop.sound`.
Allow osd representing levels that can be more than 100% by accepting
an optional parameter setting that maximum level.
gnome-settings-daemon will use this to indicate volume levels above 100%,
which our own volume indicator will soon support as well.
Ensure that both barLevel and slider can support a higher maxValue than 1
and computes various positions based on it.
It defaults to 1 if not set.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=790280.
Reuse the BarLevel class to get similar drawing behavior as Slider.
Rename theme css impacted properties and ensure that the osdWindow
remains accessible.
Ensure we don't force setting a custom border color like on the OSD.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=790280.
In a9ad91c831, a bug was introduced in the following code:
```c
this._settingsAction.connect('clicked',
this._onSettingsClicked().bind(this));
```
Notice that the callback is being executed! This commit
fixes that by removing the '()' from the callback.
As strings are guaranteed to use UTF-8 in the GNOME platform, generic
file APIs like g_file_load_contents() return raw data instead. Since
gjs' recent update to mozjs60, this data is now returns as Uint8Array
which cannot simply be treated as string - its toString() method boils
down to arr.join(',') - so use gjs' new ByteArray module to explicitly
convert the data.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/merge_requests/179
The settings action button in the system menu simply launches
gnome-control-center, so we want its icon (and accessible name)
to always match the app. So instead of keeping the button in-sync
with Settings, just look up that information from the app itself.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/issues/433
We can simply request the symbolic variant from CSS so that we don't
have to append '-symbolic' to all the names. This will always make
it easier to pick up that information from external sources (like
.desktop files).
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/issues/433
Commit e5c95b910d refactored the workspace animation to also handle
animations that involve all surrounding workspaces, but due to an
ill-advised review comment (guess whose) it broke the animation
for non-neighboring workspaces.
Update the code to handle correctly whether in a given direction:
- we have the target workspace of a given index
- we have a neighboring workspace
- we don't need to animate anything
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/merge_requests/182
Add a debug command (to be executed manually via Alt+F2) to check
that all of gnome-shell's file descriptors have the CLOEXEC flag set.
This is important so that internal file descriptors do not get passed
to apps when they are launched.
It prints a warning message for every fd that does not have the flag set.
fdwalk() is used from the standard library if available (it is not
available in glibc), otherwise we use the same implementation as glib
has internally.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/merge_requests/132
When 4fg swipe motion happens, set up early the workspace switching
animation with all surrounding workspaces. This allows us to move
all content back and forth in any direction. This works on both
touchcreens and touchpads.
When the gesture is activated, the same data is reused to follow
up with the tween animation.
The threshold has been also doubled, it was fairly small to start
with, and feels better now that workspaces stick to fingers.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=788994
Besides the separation into distinct functions, the stored data has
been made able to generically store windows from all surrounding
workspaces. All while keeping a special mode to animate between two
workspaces (The usual till now), this is the only mode exercised so
far.
In order to ease animations, all window groups are now children of
a common container, which is then animated.
A custom callback type is more convenient, but only as long as no
other callback type is required. We are about to add functionality
that does not return the filename to a screenshot saved on disk, so
prepare for that by moving to GIO's generic async callback pattern.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/issues/286
Fullscreen windows cannot be restored by touch device users unless the
application adds support for it.
As it is unlikely to change all application lets introduce a top edge
drag gesture which unmakes fullscreen windows.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/merge_requests/123
Make the indicator for active remote access use the warning color, to
indicate the severity of allowing remote access.
This only makes the indicator icon orange; the icon in the system menu
is still white.
When in lockscreen mode there's no point of resetting the auth login as there's
no welcome screen, and that would just cause the UI to freeze, with no reason.
This could have been useful if we were stopping the user to login for a given
time after ALLOWED_FAILURES attempts, but this is not the case yet.
When we get a reset signal the preemptiveAnswer should be also unset or it will
be used next time the user authPrompt will be activated, even without any further
user interaction.
Fixes#311
Add an indicator for when there is something access the display server
remotely. This could be 1) remote desktop, 2) screen cast or 3) remote
control, but all effectively applications using
org.freedesktop.portal.ScreenCast or org.gnome.portal.RemoteDesktop as
well as gnome-remote-desktop using the corresponding org.gnome.Mutter
APIs directly.
As it is now, it'll simply show a single icon for when anything is
having an active session, and a single action "Turn off" that'll close
every active session.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/merge_requests/160
The input method may hint that certain keycodes should be pressed/released
besides the textual information in ::commit. An example is hitting space
in some IMs to commit text, where both ::commit happens, and an space is
visibly inserted. In order to handle this properly, we must honor
::forward-key-press.
In order to cater for the case that a keypress is forwarded while handling
that same keypress in a physical keyboard, check the current event being
handled and just forward it as-is if it matches. This is necessary to
prevent state from being doubly set, and the second event silenced away.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/issues/275Closes: #275
If we're started by systemd, we won't be in the user's display session.
However, this is still the session that will get locked & unlocked. Ask
logind what the 'display' or 'greeter' session is, and watch for the
Unlock signal for that session to know when to unlock.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/merge_requests/137
For windows, the cursor location needs to be adjusted by the frame
offsets. However we cannot assume that there is a window, as the
shell itself can have the key focus.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/issues/414
Maximized and tiled windows can be restored with a drag gesture,
not only from their titlebars, but also from any non-reactive
parts of the top bar above the window. Currently this only works
for actual pointer devices, extend the behavior to handle touch
as well.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/merge_requests/112
If the Escape key is used for a window/app cycler/switcher shortcut
(such as "Switch windows directly"), then there is no way to cancel
the switching/cycling operation with the keyboard.
This change allows cancelling such an operation by pressing the Tab
key, but only if Tab is not already being used by the current
switcher/cycler shortcut.
Closes: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/issues/315
Key events involved in a keyboard shortcut are not completely consumed by
Mutter. That means that if the popupMenu is bound to a shortcut (e.g.
Alt<Space>) and the user keeps the keys pressed, the same key-event will be
delivered to the popupMenu. We can workaround this issue filtering out all the
events where a a modifier is down (except capslock).
Fixes: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/issues/372
Destroying and recreating the entire events list on every change is not only
wasteful, it also breaks the clear functionality as messages scheduled for
removal are replaced with "new" messages after the first message has been
removed.
Address both issues by keeping track of all messages and re-use them
whenever possible.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/issues/325
And stop using FocusCaretTracker for caret position purposes. This
new object uses 1) the text-input protocol in wayland and 2) Info
from IBusPanelService for X11 (which is meant to work for XIM too).
This drops the usage of AtspiEventListener for OSK purposes, which
is best to avoid.
If a clone gets destroyed before the corresponding MetaWindow is
removed from the workspace, we will still find it in the list of
clones and try to destroy it again. Avoid the resulting warnings
by updating the list of clones immediately when a clone is destroyed.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=791233
If a clone gets destroyed before the corresponding MetaWindow is
removed from the workspace, we will still find it in the list of
clones and try to destroy it again. Avoid the resulting warnings
by updating the list of clones immediately when a clone is destroyed.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=791233
Remove any usage of MetaScreen, as it has been removed from libmutter
in the API version 3. The corresponding functionality has been moved
into three different places: MetaDisplay, MetaX11Display (for X11
specific functionality) and MetaWorkspaceManager.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=759538
This may be the case where keyboardIndex is -1, which may be the
case where either the keyboard monitor hasn't been set yet, or
the keyboard is being unmanaged and meta_window_get_monitor
returns -1
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=788882
When middle-clicking an app icon on the Dash, it will always try to open
a new window of that app, even if the app doesn't support multiple
windows. Meanwhile, Ctrl+click on an app will only open a new window if
the app allows it.
This change prevents middle-clicks on app icons from opening new windows
for apps without multi-window support.
Closes: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/issues/316
When the actor that has the key focus is destroyed, Clutter moves
the focus to the stage. In case the destroyed actor was inside a
ModalDialog, this breaks any keyboard interaction: keynav is broken
because the stage isn't in any focus chain, and access keys like
Escape because they are handled on the dialog's parent.
The only dialog that may destroy a child without recreating the dialog
buttons (and thus moving the key focus there) is the WirelessDialog,
fix it by keeping the key focus within the dialog when removing networks
from the list.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/issues/76
Just like we did for the window list in app icons' context menu,
provide a fallback for window captions in the window picker rather
than showing blank items to the user.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/issues/26
The app icon's context menu contains a list of open windows,
identified by their title. As we currently don't handle the
case where the app didn't set a title, we end up with empty
menu items which looks clearly broken. Fall back to the app's
name in that case.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/issues/26
The close dialog for non-responding windows is closed automatically
when we detect that the window is responding again. However as we
currently only ping the window in response to certain user actions
(like focusing the window or opening the window menu), this can
easily go undetected.
Address this by periodically pinging the window while the close
dialog is shown.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/issues/298
The dialog won't be visible when unredirection is in place (for example
while a fullscreen window is focused), so disable unredirection while
the dialog is up.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/issues/298
Similar to what it's done when the main connection changes, we need
to make sure that the icon in the panel gets updated before calling
_syncConnectivity(), so that the icon gets always updated if needed,
regardless of whether there's an active connection or not.
This is needed because there's at least one case when an icon should
be shown when the computer is not connected to any network: when a
hotspot has been enabled, which can be useful even if there's not
an internet connection to share (e.g. to easily allow connecting
other devices to the computer.
Closes: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/issues/214
While the libnm-glib version of the function returns a GByteArray*
that gjs can directly cast to the required gutf8*, the libnm function
returns GBytes* from which we need to explicitly fetch the data.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/issues/136
commit 642107a2 attempts to avoid resetting the current keymap on
spurious input source changes.
It does this by checking if the current layout id is found in
the new list of layouts and resetting the current layout to the
associated match in the list. By not nullifying the current
layout, it won't get subsequently reset.
Unfortunately, if the order of the list changes, resetting the
current keymap is still necessary, since the order corresponds
with the index of the activated group.
This commit changes the code to nullify the current layout if
its group index changes.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1573923
The IM can pretty much update the input sources anytime (even if
to set the same ones). That ends up triggering rebuilding all user
defined keymaps, and losing modifier state if we are unfortunate
enough that this caught us while pressing one.
One common situation seems to be password entries, resulting in
the wrong character being printed if the first character happens
to require the shift key.
If the current keymap is not found in the newly loaded list,
this._current will end up null, with the same behavior as we get
currently (immediate keymap reload).
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1569211https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/issues/240Closes: #240
Commit f285f2c6 changed Scripting.createTestWindow() to accept a parameter
object instead of a parameter list but forgot to remove the width and height
arguments. This breaks the "core" test as all windows are created with default
settings.
We use the close() method to disconnect signal handlers set up in
init(), however the handler ID is only valid in the first call in
case the method is called more than once.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/issues/221
If we get an error during device enrollment, the message might be
prefixed to indicate that the error came from the remote peer. We
are presenting that message to the user so strip that prefix away
if it was there.
The devices emitted (device, error) while the connected handler
was expecting (error, device). The former is more consistent
with the rest of the code (so change it to device, error).
The _blockTimedLoginUntilIdle method sets a timeout to be called after
the user is idle for 5 seconds. That timeout is erroneously given the
source name "[gnome-shell] this._timedLoginAnimationTime" which looks
like a copy-and-paste mistake. The original intention was probably to
use a source name of "[gnome-shell] this._timedLoginIdleTimeOutId" which
more closely matches existing convention for source names.
This commit fixes that.
Make sure the focus isn't grabbed right after user interaction starts a
new timed login. Only grab it after the idle timeout is done and on the
first run instead.
Normally, we give the user a 5 second grace period of inactivity before
starting a timed login operation. Unfortunately, that grace period
timeout isn't properly removed if the timed login operation is restarted
during the grace period. That means the timeout handler can
inadvertently get called multiple times leading to the grace period
duration getting subtracted from the total animation time more than
once.
This commit ensures we only ever have one grace period timeout scheduled
at a time.
The timed login feature currently cancels the timed login operation when
a user presses a key but, oddly, only hides the indicator when the user
releases the key. This means that if a user holds down a key that
doesn't key repeat, the timed login indicator will continue to run after
the timed login operation is cancelled.
This commit address the problem by ensuring the timed login indicator is
hidden on any key press event, at the same time the timed login
operation is canceled.
Modes, extensions and other GNOME Shell assets are searched in appropriate
subdirectories of each directory in XDG_DATA_DIRS, falling back
to global.datadir.
However, this isn't the case for themes, which are currently always expected
in global.datadir, even when referenced by a mode in a different XDG_DATA_DIR.
The fix is to have the theme finding pattern follow the same logic as other
elements.
Fixes#167.
The HIG discourages the use of icons in menus except for "noun" items
(files, bookmarks, ...). While those should be rarely used in the
application menu, it still makes sense to support them in the few
cases where they are used.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=760985
Otherwise it happens that porthole is computed again after that the
overlay is hidden (triggered by a layout reallocation) and thus not
regenerated again afterwards.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=792687
The author of the original URL-matching regex warns[0] that the pattern may
cause certain regex engines to lock up with certain input, namely patterns
that contain parentheses. It turns out SpiderMonkey is affected, but rather
than switching to the author's improved version (that is still crazy), sim-
plify the pattern a bit by removing support for nested parentheses in URLs.
Even a single pair of parentheses is extremely rare, so this is unlikely to
make a noticeable difference (other than not locking up SpiderMonkey of
course) ...
[0] http://daringfireball.net/2010/07/improved_regex_for_matching_urls
Since commit 78a92fb6be we no longer pop up authentication dialogs
on the lock screen, however any dialog that is already open at that
time remains open. This is unexpected, so hide the dialog until
the screen is unlocked again.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/issues/166
Since commit 1939e22c22, we move the keyboard focus with the hover
highlight. However while this makes sense when interacting with
the window picker, it interferes with keyboard navigation of other
components like dash or top bar. Address this by only moving the
focus when the previous focus was already inside the window picker
or unset.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/issues/50
The original UTC support in GWeather piggy-backed on the existing API, but
as "country" or "city" don't make sense in the context of UTC or AoE, the
concept of "named timezones" was introduced. Handle those explicitly to get
back labels for those locations.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/issues/150
We don't toggle the overview if the request happens too close to the
last activation, to filter out double-clicks or activation by both
the hot corner and a click. However as the check is based on the
real time, the check breaks if the system clock moves backwards and
the last activations appears to be in the future. Fix this by using
monotonic time which is guaranteed to only move forward.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=763886
While polkit requests *should* be the result of a user action, that's
not always the case in practice and authentication dialogs can pop up
out of nowhere at any time. That's always annoying, but particularly
bad on the lock screen. If we disabled the polkit component altogether,
the fallback GTK-based agent would kick in, so instead handle the case
explicitly and postpone showing the dialog until the session is unlocked.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/issues/179
Even though we are using an "xkb" source, it still makes sense to
pass the event through the IBus simple engine, in order to let it
handle compose keys and ctrl+shift+[u|e].
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/issues/115Closes: #115
boltd 0.2 gained a property that indicates if it is authorizing
devices or not. If it indeed is not authorizing then we wont
try to enroll new devices because that would otherwise lead to
and error.
When we move keyboard focus to the search entry, we replay the key press
that triggered the move to the entry using ClutterActor's event() method.
Since commit 3b293e91e we specify that the event is in the capture phase
to make it work with StIMText, but now that commit 83accce24 removed it,
we have to return to the expected non-capture flag that matches the orig-
inal event to unbreak find-as-you-type functionality.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/issues/72
Find-as-you type was never automatically handled by StIMText, but
by the existing stage key-press handler. The functionality broke
for a different reason, we will fix it after reverting the recent
captured-event changes.
This reverts commits bc4462cd0c and e4ee944d8d.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/issues/72
Since commit c4f2bb5f, close buttons are hidden by making them fully
transparent rather than setting their visibility to false to keep
the overall message layout stable. As a result, the buttons now work
even when invisible, which is clearly unexpected - fix this by updating
the reactive property appropriately.
Fixes https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/issues/66
When not using arrow notation with anonymous functions, we use Lang.bind()
to bind `this` to named callbacks. However since ES5, this functionality
is already provided by Function.prototype.bind() - in fact, Lang.bind()
itself uses it when no extra arguments are specified. Just use the built-in
function directly where possible, and use arrow notation in the few places
where we pass additional arguments.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/merge_requests/23
imports.misc.ibusManager.IBus is declared as const, so referencing it
from another module triggers a warning with recent mozjs. As of commit
083d11a032 IBus is mandatory, so just make it a regular import to avoid
the warning.
Right now we emit session-activated any time the bullet
moves in the session menu. That includes at startup when
picking an item arbitrarily, and any time GDM reports the
session was read from the user's account settings.
session-activated informs GDM about the newly selected session,
so emitting it in response to GDM reporting a session is a
bad idea.
This commit changes the code to only emit session-activated when
the user explicitly activates a session item from the gear menu.
Note, we no longer set the active session explicitly at start up.
This is a good thing since the item we were picking wasn't
necessarily correct. It does means if GDM fails to inform us
about the correct default session we'll now show no bullet instead
of a bullet on the wrong item.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=740142
gnome-shell currently initiates an automatic login attempt if
timed login is enabled and the timed login animation completes.
Unfortunately, if animations are disabled (as is the case for
virtual machines) then the timed login animation will complete
instantly, and timed login will proceed immediately after gnome-shell
has noticed the user is idle for 5 seconds.
This commit addresses that problem by initiating timed login and the
animation from a main loop timeout, instead of using the tweener api.
This is pseudo-class is added on .shift-key-uppercase whenever the shift
state is latched, a matching selector would be:
.keyboard-key.shift-key-uppercase:latched {}
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/issues/46
Drop the UTF8 glyphs from those, and add style classes so those can be
specifically themed and given a background image. The style classes are:
.keyboard-key.enter-key{}
.keyboard-key.shift-key-lowercase{} /* applies while lowercase */
.keyboard-key.shift-key-uppercase{} /* applies while uppercase */
.keyboard-key.layout-key{}
.keyboard-key.hide-key{}
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/issues/46
Do the finicky checks to adjust key widths and whatnot based on other
values than the label. This makes the label exclusively used for
presentation (i.e. setting up a St.Label).
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/issues/46
Instead of latching all states, make shift unlatched by default, and only
latched when making a long press on the key. When not latched, the keyboard
will switch to the first level (alphabetic lowercase) after the first key
press.
Also, move the actual level switch to Key::pressed, so it feels more
reactive on long press.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/issues/46
It was mistakenly connecting twice to the 'released' signal. Also, move
level changes to key release, since it will be more convenient to hook
latched states on long press.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/issues/46
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.