Use our new "surface_mapped" field to delay the showing of XWayland clients
until we have associated together the window's XID and the Wayland surface ID.
This ensures that when we show this window to the compositor, it will properly
use the Wayland surface for rendering, rather than trying to use COMPOSITE and
crash.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=720631
To properly resize clients, we need to send them configure events
with the size we computed from the constraint system, and
then check if the new size they ask is compatible with
our expectation.
Note that this does not handle interactive resizing yet, it
merely makes the API calls work for wayland clients.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=707401
Add MIN(...) with the interface version actually implemented
to all resource constructor, so that we never risk seeing requests
we don't implement (and consequently segfault)
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=707851
It is a very bad idea in a glib program (especially one heavily
using glib child watching facilities, like gnome-shell) to handle
SIGCHLD. While we're there, let's also use g_spawn_async, which
solves some malloc-after-fork problems and makes the code generally
cleaner.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=705816
This adds support for running mutter as a hybrid X and Wayland
compositor. It runs a headless XWayland server for X applications
that presents wayland surfaces back to mutter which mutter can then
composite.
This aims to not break Mutter's existing support for the traditional X
compositing model which means a single build of Mutter can be
distributed supporting the traditional model and the new Wayland based
compositing model.
TODO: although building with --disable-wayland has at least been tested,
I still haven't actually verified that running as a traditional
compositor isn't broken currently.
Note: At this point no input is supported
Note: multiple authors have contributed to this patch:
Authored-by: Robert Bragg <robert@linux.intel.com>
Authored-by: Neil Roberts <neil@linux.intel.com>
Authored-by: Rico Tzschichholz.
Authored-by: Giovanni Campagna <gcampagna@src.gnome.org>