Soup.SessionAsync by default sets timeout and idle_timeout to 0. This
causes connections to hang around in state CLOSE_WAIT forever after the
remote host has closed the connection.
To fix this, we could set timeout and idle_timeout manually. However,
Soup.SessionAsync is marked as deprecated anyway and should be replaced
by Soup.Session. Doing so also sets a default timeout of 60 seconds.
Fixes https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/-/issues/2774
(cherry picked from commit a47e0f9845)
Removing a stylesheet from the theme will trigger a style update. There's
little point in updating the extension actors that are about to be destroyed
(hopefully), so call the extension's disable() function first.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/-/issues/2757
(cherry picked from commit 6d5e93b00b)
Sometimes an MPRIS media player will create and then destroy an object
before the signals that handle the object's destruction can be created.
This verifies that the object still exists after the necessary signals
have been created.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/-/issues/2776
(cherry picked from commit f526e592fe)
Since commit 0ecddafc20 gsd-xsettings startup has been made conditional
on the systemd user instance being available at runtime. While that is
correct, it means that completing xwayland startup is also conditional
now.
We always want xwayland startup to go ahead, so wait for the XSettings
plugin to appear on the bus when gsd-xsettings is launched by gnome-session
and complete the task immediately if startup fails.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/-/merge_requests/1252
Avoid starting/stopping the gsd-xsettings systemd unit if the shell itself
was not started via systemd. In the lack of a user session manager, we
have no means to neatly start/stop services, so should rely on the good
ol' gnome-session to do this for us.
This changes the return value meaning slightly, TRUE means "service did
start", FALSE otherwise. The error is only raised if we ought to start,
but it produced an error somehow.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/-/merge_requests/1238https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/-/issues/2755
Changing the icon to 'system-log-out-symbolic' has no visual
change in a default GNOME setup since both 'system-log-out-symbolic'
and 'application-exit-symbolic' are the same in adwaita-icon-theme
(at the time of writing), however, other icon themes differentiate
between the two icons so pointing to the appropriate icon name
is the right thing to do.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/-/issues/2751
(cherry picked from commit 7d60f418e7)
gjs has gotten less forgiving about missing getters/setters, and
commit 6aa1b817 missed the missing getter in the base policy class.
Most notifications use a policy subclass that already provides a
getter, but at least Main.notify() and friends don't; unbreak them
by fixing the base class.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/-/merge_requests/1229
(cherry picked from commit 5e254666b0)
These properties are never written; in the base class they are always
their default values, and in the subclasses the getters are overridden.
This will be necessary because GJS is adding checks to make sure that
readable properties always have a getter, writable properties always
have a setter, and that the variations of camelCase/snake_case are
handled correctly. It's supposedly backwards compatible, but that
assumes that code is not doing things like forgetting a setter on a
writable property. (If the missing setter had ever been called, it might
have led to a crash, which is why we've made this change.)
This is the minimally invasive patch which should work with both older
and newer versions of GJS. If you decide to require GJS 1.65.2, then
you'll also be able to remove the getters from NotificationPolicy as
well.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/-/merge_requests/1205
(cherry picked from commit 6aa1b817c9)
Since we now remove all theme nodes on a stylesheet change (ie.
StTheme's "custom-stylesheets-changed" signal) instead of only
invalidating them, those nodes may not be accessed anymore as soon as
"custom-stylesheets-changed" is emitted.
It turned out though that when comparing them to the newly generated
nodes in `st_widget_recompute_style()` using the
`st_theme_node_paint/geometry_equal()` functions, the properties of the
old nodes will still be accessed, causing a crash since the
CRDeclarations are already freed.
To fix that, keep the reference to the CRStylesheet, which owns the
CRDeclarations used by the theme nodes, around a bit longer, so it's
still possible to access the CRDeclarations inside the
"custom-stylesheets-changed" signal handler. This allows us to compare
the old theme nodes to the new ones since the CSS properties of both are
still valid.
Fixes https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/-/issues/2709
(cherry picked from commit e06109c23c)
Commit d76162c1c0 removed the ability to pass an extension UUID to
the Extensions app, when we moved the dialog to a portal and made
gnome-shell use it instead of spawning the extensions app.
However that missed that many extensions called out to the app to
open their own prefs.
While extensions are encouraged to switch to the new openPrefs()
convenience method added in commit 8030d9ad32, restore the old
behavior with a small script under the old gnome-shell-extension-prefs
name that either calls out to the portal or launches the app.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/-/merge_requests/1220
We kept the old binary name when overhauling the tool for the Extensions
app to avoid unnecessary churn for packagers/distributors.
However we now have a reason to "free" the old name, so rename the binary
to match the (sub)project name.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/-/merge_requests/1220
Turns out it's not that clear in which cases we want to apply updates
and in which ones we shouldn't. For example one case is when the device
is running on battery, where we currently display a warning, but still
install updates by default.
So let's revert that again for now and hopefully work out a proper
concept for updates in the future.
This reverts commit ddb85c03c3.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/-/merge_requests/1228
When a modal that's not on top of the modalActorFocusStack gets popped,
we shift the focus stack as described in popModal() to ensure the chain
remains correct. That however destroys the association of a modal actor
and its prevFocus actor on the focus stack, because the prevFocus actors
are now moved to different entries of the stack.
Now when a prevFocus actor gets destroyed, we don't handle that case
correctly and search for the modal actor that was associated with the
prevFocus actor before the stack was shifted, which means we end up
unsetting the wrong prevFocus actor.
So fix that and search the stack for the prevFocus actor which is being
destroyed instead to unset the correct entry.
Thanks to Florian Müllner for figuring out the actual issue and
proposing this fix.
Fixes https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/-/issues/2446
(cherry picked from commit d3880c0bff)
StThemeNodes are built around the assumption that they're "immutable",
that means they are created once with certain parameters (that resolve
to certain css properties) and then replaced with new ones in case those
parameters changed.
Changes to the internal information stored by theme nodes (i.e. the css
properties, font names or the cached scale-factor) are not all handled
the same though: For changes to the font or the scale-factor we remove
all theme nodes from the cache and let the widgets which are on stage
generate new theme nodes. For changes to the css properties/the
stylesheet, we invalidate the properties of all theme nodes but keep
them in the cache using `_st_theme_node_reset_for_stylesheet_change()`.
So be a bit more consistent and handle changes to the css-properties/the
stylesheet stored by StThemeNodes the same way as changes to the font or
scale-factor.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/-/merge_requests/1218
(cherry picked from commit 4dfa39457e)
We currently always ignore the minimum width of the hint actor and
request/allocate the preferred width. This can be problematic with
labels with long text, where we should rather ellipsize the text
than allow the entry to grow indefinively.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/-/issues/2607
(cherry picked from commit 7d7a15f978)
Theme node invalidation stops at unmapped widgets, and widgets
that forget to chain up to the default ::style-changed implementation.
This may leave stale nodes that were invalidated on
StThemeContext::changed, but are still set on widgets, and maybe
used for CSS property lookups.
Make sure that theme node invalidation happens always by moving
propagation outside the vfunc, and ensure the theme nodes are reset
across the full actor tree. Emission of ::style-changed, and obtaining
a new theme node may be delayed till when the actor is mapped.
The theme node is also cleared after unparenting an actor to avoid
stale references.
This ensures that all widgets get their theme node cleared after
stylesheet changes, instead of maybe being left with a theme node
that's been cleared of all its properties.
Fixes: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/-/issues/2541https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/-/merge_requests/1223
(cherry picked from commit 325ff73c5b)
We currently let the entry of the autoPrompt grab the key focus inside
setQuestion(), which is called from _onAskQuestion(), which is the
callback of the "ask-question" signal.
It seems that the "ask-question" signal isn't emitted again right after
the password-check failed, but a few seconds after that. Since we get
the "verification-failed" signal earlier than "ask-question" (right
after we know the check failed) and we also get a hint whether the entry
should be usable again with the canRetry argument, we can also grab key
focus to in the same step.
So do that by grabbing key focus when making the entry sensitive.
Fixes https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/-/issues/2655
(cherry picked from commit 8d139bbd95)