Commit Graph

1503 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Jasper St. Pierre
c2abe43ee7 window: Only update the unconstrained rect when we actually moved/resized
Since Wayland configures are more of a hint to the client than anything,
we don't want to save the unconstrained rect when we're just hinting to
the client that it should resize, since it could ignore us. This would
get us stuck in a loop, since meta_window_move_resize_now would use the
unconstrained_rect to resize, and we don't remove the resize from the
queue if we have an outstanding request like that.

This fixes a bunch of traffic / CPU usage when trying to resize
weston-terminal.
2014-07-07 14:11:14 -04:00
Jasper St. Pierre
02220ed6c7 window: Don't eat events on O-R windows
For XWayland, we need to make sure to send out mouse events on O-R
windows, otherwise they won't get motion or button events.

The comment mentions being eaten for the compositor, but we already
bypass the compositor for all events that have a window. The return
value just controls whether we pass them to Wayland.
2014-07-01 14:41:38 -04:00
Jasper St. Pierre
af135c0b0b monitor-manager: Rename output_id to winsys_id
The output_id is more of an opaque identifier for the monitor, based on
its underlying ID from the windowing system. Since we also use the term
"output_id" for the output's index, rename our use of the opaque cookie
"output_id" to "winsys_id".
2014-07-01 13:24:34 -04:00
Jasper St. Pierre
42c972735e window: Don't treat an output_id of 0 as an invalid ID 2014-07-01 13:18:31 -04:00
Jasper St. Pierre
0a47d135ac screen: Fix up last commit
Forgot to squash after building.
2014-06-27 14:05:38 -04:00
Jasper St. Pierre
ec8ed1dbb0 screen: Set a black background for testing purposes 2014-06-27 12:38:11 -04:00
Jasper St. Pierre
f1d8428650 window: Fix get_client_area_rect for the frame rect conversion
Specifically for CSD windows -- this was just absolutely wrong
before. This fixes weird painting and clipping artifacts for
CSD windows.
2014-06-27 11:58:39 -04:00
Owen W. Taylor
8d29d22e99 meta_accelerator_parse(): handle keysyms without the XF86 prefix
The GDK and hence GNOME standard is that keys that begin with XF86 according to
libxkbcommon not prefixed with XF86, though gdk_keyval_from_name() strips XF86
if provided. If libxkbcommon doesn't recognize the accelerator name without
XF86, try again adding XF86 to the start.

This restores compatibility with gnome-settings-daemon, schemas, and existing
user configuration.

https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=727993
2014-06-27 10:37:42 -04:00
Jasper St. Pierre
a615f93060 window: Set custom frame extents to 0 if we don't have any
This is just a quick code cleanup.
2014-06-26 13:58:11 -04:00
Giovanni Campagna
c562657f1e main: kill custom log handler
It just gets in the way of gnome-shell's log handler (which
includes gjs backtraces optionally), it requires people to understand
what 8 or 16 mean as log levels, and it loses the log domain.
2014-06-26 19:10:28 +02:00
Jasper St. Pierre
bb92054c86 window: Use g_object_notify_by_pspec 2014-06-26 10:31:22 -04:00
Jasper St. Pierre
4e4a6eb5d7 window: Use g_object_class_install_properties 2014-06-26 10:31:01 -04:00
Tom Beckmann
692acbd986 window: Add a property for on_all_workspaces
Some plugins and extensions want to be able to know when the sticky
field of a window changes, so add a property for it and allow them
to connect to the notify::on-all-workspaces signal.
2014-06-26 10:31:00 -04:00
Florian Müllner
967b6c33df window: Add user_op parameter to update_monitor()
When workspaces-only-on-primary is set and a window is moved back to the
primary, we also move it to the active workspace to avoid the confusion
of a visible window suddenly disappearing when crossing the monitor border.
However when the window is not actually moved by the user, preserving the
workspace makes more sense - we already do this in some cases (e.g. when
moving between primary monitors), but miss others (unplugging the previous
monitor); just add an explicit user_op parameter as used elsewhere to cover
all exceptions.

https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=731760
2014-06-24 23:42:06 +02:00
Florian Müllner
00c7a27732 window: Keep track of preferred output
Remember the last monitor a window was moved to by user action and
try to move it back on monitor changes; this should match user
expectations much better when a monitor is unplugged temporarily.

https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=731760
2014-06-24 23:42:06 +02:00
Florian Müllner
048ba353c4 window: Don't make windows on non-primaries sticky on restart
When workspaces-only-on-primary is set, a window can be on all
workspaces either because it is on a non-primary workspace, or
because it was explicitly made sticky. Only the latter is reflected
in _NET_WM_STATE, but both will result in a "magic" _NET_WM_DESKTOP,
which we (and probably other WMs) use to set the initial sticky state.
So to avoid confusing other WMs (or ourselves), make sure to only
have _NET_WM_STATE_STICKY reflected in _NET_WM_DESKTOP when unmanaging.
2014-06-24 23:01:59 +02:00
Florian Müllner
555e2f6de2 Revert "window: Move placement code from the constraints path"
Window state like maximization and minimization should be preserved
over restarts - in a patch review, this would qualify as "needs-work",
so revert the cleanup until the issues are fixed.

This reverts commit dc6decefb5.
2014-06-24 22:59:06 +02:00
Jasper St. Pierre
dc6decefb5 window: Move placement code from the constraints path
This way, it's implemented as a special case in move_resize_internal,
which makes it a lot easier to manage.
2014-06-17 11:40:49 -04:00
Jasper St. Pierre
25d7e48077 constraints: Clean up logical operations
The logical version of the bitwise XOR operator ^ is !=. I don't
know why XOR was even used in the first place.
2014-06-17 11:21:25 -04:00
Jasper St. Pierre
b0b8f37240 window: Save the buffer_rect internally
Rather than calculate it speculatively with the current properties
which may be too new or too out of date, make sure it always fits
with the proper definition. We update it when we update the toplevel
window for X11, and when a Wayland surface is committed with a newly
attached buffer.
2014-06-17 11:15:32 -04:00
Jasper St. Pierre
188e4e1b92 window: Rename get_input_rect to get_buffer_rect
With get_input_region existing, get_input_rect is a misnomer. Really,
it's about the geometry of the output surface, and it's only used that
way in the compositor code.

Way back when in GNOME 3.2, get_input_rect was added when we added
invisible borders. get_outer_rect was always synonymous with server-side
geometry of the toplevel. get_outer_rect was used for both user-side
policy (the "frame rect") and to get the geometry of the window.

Invisible borders were meant to extend the input region of the frame
window silently. Since most users of get_outer_rect cared about the
frame rect, we kept that the same and added a new method, get_input_rect
to get the full rect of the framed window with all invisible borders for
input kept on.

As time went on and CSD and Wayland became a reality, the relationship
between the server-side geometry and the "frame rect" became more
complicated, as can be evidenced by the recent commits. Since clients
don't tend to be framed anymore, they set their own input region.

get_buffer_rect is also sort of a poor name, since X11 doesn't really
have buffers, but we don't really have many other alternatives.

This doesn't change any of the code, nor the meaning. It will always
refer to the rectangle where the toplevel should be placed.
2014-06-17 10:33:52 -04:00
Jasper St. Pierre
9d5273bb15 window: Fix get_input_rect in a hacky way
All of the users of get_input_rect don't actually want a synthesized
input rect based off of the current margins. What they really want is
the last-configured size of the toplevel window.

Since we don't properly track this anymore in the generic MetaWindow,
use XGetWindowAttributes to fetch a server-side rectangle. This is a
bad layer violation, but since the window geometry code will have to
be rewritten anyway for the Wayland set_window_geometry, let's just
push a hacky fix for now.
2014-06-16 18:34:07 -04:00
Jasper St. Pierre
3c0fae74f1 window: Move get_toplevel_xwindow to window-x11 2014-06-16 18:29:38 -04:00
Jasper St. Pierre
2d2c47ba49 display: Remove unused variable 2014-06-12 17:46:23 -04:00
Jasper St. Pierre
89cdfc9194 display: Use G_SOURCE_CONTINUE / G_SOURCE_REMOVE 2014-06-12 17:46:23 -04:00
Jasper St. Pierre
ad60ea9e0e display: Use meta_window_has_pointer instead of XQueryPointer 2014-06-12 17:46:23 -04:00
Florian Müllner
a7350475e8 workspace: Extend builtin struts to screen edge when possible
Struts are defined in terms of screen edges, so expand the rectangles
we get via set_builtin_struts() accordingly. However we do want to
allow chrome on edges between monitors, in which case the expansion
would render an entire monitor unusable - don't expand the rectangles
in that case, which means we will only use them for constraining
windows but ignore them for the client-visible _NET_WORKAREA property.

https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=730527
2014-06-12 15:28:46 +02:00
Florian Müllner
f3d7c9cff9 testboxes: Update test cases
Who cares? We do now ...

https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=730527
2014-06-12 15:28:46 +02:00
Florian Müllner
906cbeed61 boxes: Ignore struts that don't attach to the side they claim
Like the _NET_WM_STRUT/_NET_WM_STRUT_PARTIAL client properties,
_NET_WORKAREA is defined in terms of screen geometry rather than
taking individual monitors into account. However we do want to
allow system chrome to be attached to a monitor edge rather than
a screen edges under some circumstances. As not all clients can
be assumed to deal gracefully with the resulting workarea, use
those "struts" only internally for constraining windows, but
ignore them when exporting _NET_WORKAREA.

https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=730527
2014-06-12 15:28:42 +02:00
Florian Müllner
0fccb0fc86 testboxes: Fix find_closest_point_to_line() test
Eeeks, testing floating points for equality ...
2014-06-12 01:39:54 +02:00
Florian Müllner
8100cefd4c screen: Split workspace initialization from meta_screen_new()
Since commit 8b2b65246a, we assume that the compositor always
exists. Alas, the assumption is wrong - the compositor is currently
initialized after the screen, but meta_screen_new() itself may
call a compositor function if initialization involves a workspace
switch (which will happen when meta_workspace_activate() is called
more than once and for different workspaces - or in other words,
when _NET_CURRENT_DESKTOP is set and not 0).
So carefully split out the offending bits and only call them after
the compositor has been initialized.

https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=731332
2014-06-11 23:35:34 +02:00
Florian Müllner
d7e99a3f86 prefs: Queue change notification when app menu visibility changed
Toggling the option should have an immediate effect, not only on
frame/state changes.
2014-06-11 23:34:09 +02:00
Jasper St. Pierre
12fc394b92 display: Fix the logic for moving attached dialogs
If we have a tree of a window, a non-attached dialog, and then an
attached dialog, we want to move the second window, not the attached
dialog or the topmost. In other words, we want to move the first
non-attached window, or the first "freefloating window".

This happens in Firefox, whose Preferences dialog is freefloating,
but suboptions of those are modal dialogs.
2014-06-11 16:42:05 -04:00
Jasper St. Pierre
53814fefc1 Move all X11 event processing to a new file in x11/ 2014-06-11 16:28:45 -04:00
Florian Müllner
fba022cc06 window-x11: Handle legacy fullscreen requests
Doing this on the actual resize requests makes more sense than
handling it as a window-manager imposed constraints, so move
the code accordingly.

https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=730681
2014-06-09 22:27:33 +02:00
Florian Müllner
3f6c6f1dd9 constraints: Translate frame to client rect for legacy fullscreen check
Stupid apps fullscreen themselves by resizing the client window to
monitor size. A monitor-sized frame rect on the other hand is perfectly
normal on monitors without struts - stop force-fullscreening those
and catch the real baddies instead.

https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=730681
2014-06-09 21:28:50 +02:00
Rico Tzschichholz
f5a4e996a8 display: Remove the screen from get_tab_list 2014-06-03 14:40:15 +02:00
Florian Müllner
b64548ee1f Pass button_rect when opening window menu from button
When opening the window menu without an associated control - e.g.
by right-clicking the titlebar or by keyboard - using coordinates
for the menu position is appropriate. However when the menu is
associated with a window button, the expected behavior in the
shell can be implemented much easier with the full button geometry:
the menu will point to the center of the button's bottom edge
rather than align to the left/right side of the titlebar as it
does now, and the clickable area where a release event does not
dismiss the menu will match the actual clickable area in mutter.

So add an additional show_window_menu_for_rect() function and
use it when opening the menu from a button.

https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=731058
2014-06-02 23:49:48 +02:00
Jasper St. Pierre
53425fa721 window: Make sure not to respond to input events on OR windows
This can happen since we select for events on the root window, and
clients themselves might not select for input, meaning the X server
will bubble up. Just do nothing and ignore the event in this case.

This should hopefully fix some of the

Window manager warning: Log level 8: meta_window_raise: assertion '!window->override_redirect' failed
Window manager warning: Log level 8: meta_window_focus: assertion '!window->override_redirect' failed

spam that people have been seeing.
2014-06-02 15:51:41 -04:00
Jasper St. Pierre
b32c837df9 window: Fix placement not actually placing windows
Since we often call meta_window_move_resize_now immediately after
mapping a window, we need to make sure that the placed coordinates
are saved in the unconstrained_rect. Ideally, placement positions
wouldn't be part of the constraints system, but instead are just
done inside meta_window_move_resize_internal as part of a special
path.

We're still working out the kinks of one large-scale refactor, so
it's best not to do another one while the first is going on. This
would be a great future cleanup, though: untangling constraints
and placement, alongside the force_placement state machine and
friends.
2014-05-29 14:09:57 -04:00
Jasper St. Pierre
dd03a76d51 place: Reindent 2014-05-29 13:58:08 -04:00
Jasper St. Pierre
806a666950 Make the native backend build-optional 2014-05-29 12:43:08 -04:00
Jasper St. Pierre
b240a5e819 keybindings: Only add VT keybindings if we're using the native backend 2014-05-29 12:43:07 -04:00
Jasper St. Pierre
fe823b3553 events: Improve check for native backend 2014-05-29 12:43:07 -04:00
Florian Müllner
d380d30ef4 Update (allow-none) annotations
The annotation has been deprecated in favor of (nullable) and/or
(optional).
2014-05-28 21:55:03 +02:00
Jasper St. Pierre
1fe5b3e7d5 window: Construct the frame before the initial move_resize
This ensures sure that the initial ConfigureRequest we make is
correct.
2014-05-28 11:47:14 -04:00
Jasper St. Pierre
f3f3c94831 frame: Don't reset window->rect 2014-05-28 10:50:23 -04:00
Jasper St. Pierre
6e06648f7a window: Refactor all move/resize operations to be in frame rect space
For Wayland, we want to have everything possible in terms of the frame
rect, or "window geometry" as the Wayland protocol calls it, in order
to properly eliminate some flashing when changing states to fullscreen
or similar.

For this, we need to heavily refactor how the code is structured, and
make it so that meta_window_move_resize_internal is specified in terms
of the frame rect coordinate space, and transforming all entry points
to meta_window_move_resize_internal.

This is a big commit that's hard to tear apart. I tried to split it
as best I can, but there's still just a large amount of changes that
need to happen at once.

Expect some regressions from this. Sorry for any temporary regression
that this might cause.
2014-05-27 15:44:34 -04:00
Jasper St. Pierre
afb41f715b core: Make META_CORE_GET_FRAME_RECT return the "frame rect"
We have two different coordinate spaces here. One is the rectangle
returned by meta_window_get_frame_rect, which is called the "frame
rect" or "the window geometry", which includes visible frame borders
but not invisible frame borders. The other is "frame->rect" which
corresponds to the frame's server geometry. That is, it includes
both visible and invisible frame borders.

These two were of course the same until we introduced invisible
frame borders, and an executive decision was made to make
meta_window_get_frame_rect return the rectangle bounding the
visible portions of the frame.

As time went on, the "frame rect" turned out to be more useful when
making decisions upon, since the user often doesn't think about the
invisible window geometry as part of the window.

We already calculate what amounts to the "frame rect" in the theme
code, so just change META_CORE_GET_FRAME_RECT to consume that
directly.
2014-05-27 15:44:33 -04:00
Jasper St. Pierre
19d26dde92 core: Convert GET_FRAME_WIDTH / GET_FRAME_HEIGHT to GET_FRAME_RECT
Since we're going to be calling meta_window_get_frame_rect in here
soon, I'd rather it be one method call, rather than two. We can't
put it at the toplevel, since that might cause infinite recursion
(e.g. meta_core_get calls meta_window_get_frame_rect calls
meta_ui_get_frame_borders calls meta_core_get, ...)
2014-05-27 15:44:33 -04:00