Better to have the relevant object figure out whether it is a good
position to be unredirectable other than the actor, which should be
responsible for being composited.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/798
Currently we check whether a window is alive everytime it's focused.
This means that an application that doesn't respond to the check-alive
event during startup always showing the "application froze" dialog,
without the user ever trying to interact with it.
An example where this tends to to happen is with games, and for this
particular scenario, it's purely an annoyance, as I never tried to
interact with the game window in the first place, so I don't care that
it's not responding - it's loading.
To avoid these unnecessary particular "app-is-frozen" popups, remove the
alive check from the focus function, and instead move it back to the
"meta_window_activate_full()" call. To also trigger it slightly more
often, also add it to the path that triggers the window focus when a
user actively clicks on the window.
This means that we currently check whether a window is alive on:
* Any time the window is activated. This means e.g. alt-tab or
selecting the window in the overview.
* The user clicks on the window.
Note that the second only works for an already focused window on
Wayland, as on X11, we don't refocus it. This particular case isn't
changed with this commit, as we didn't call meta_window_focus() to begin
with here.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1182
This is so that cogl-trace.h can start using things from cogl-macros.h,
and so that it doesn't leak cogl-config.h into the world, while exposing
it to e.g. gnome-shell so that it can make use of it as well. There is
no practical reason why we shouldn't just include cogl-trace.h via
cogl.h as we do with everything else.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/1059
Commit cda9579034 fixed a corner case when setting the initial workspace
state of transient windows, but it still missed a case:
should_be_on_all_workspaces() returns whether the window should be on all
workspaces according to its properties/placement, but it doesn't take
transient relations into account.
That means in case of nested transients, we can still fail the assert:
1. on-all-workspaces toplevel
2. should_be_on_all_workspaces() is TRUE for the first transient's parent,
as the window from (1) has on_all_workspaces_requested == TRUE
3. should_be_on_all_workspaces() is FALSE for the second transient's
parent, as the window from (2) is only on-all-workspace because
of its parent
We can fix this by either using the state from the root ancestor
instead of the direct transient parent, or by using the parent's
on_all_workspaces_state.
The latter is simpler, so go with that.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/issues/1083
This commits adds support on the MetaWindow and constraints engine side
for asynchronously repositioning a window with a placement rule, either
due to environmental changes (e.g. parent moved) or explicitly done so
via `meta_window_update_placement_rule()`.
This is so far unused, as placement rules where this functionality is
triggered are not yet constructed by the xdg-shell implementation, and
no users of `meta_window_update_placement_rule()` exists yet.
To summarize, it works by making it possible to produce placement rules
with the parent rectangle a window should be placed against, while
creating a pending configuration that is not applied until acknowledged
by the client using the xdg-shell configure/ack_configure mechanisms.
An "temporary" constrain result is added to deal with situations
where the client window *must* move immediately even though it has not yet
acknowledged a new configuration that was sent. This happens for example
when the parent window is moved, causing the popup window to change its
relative position e.g. because it ended up partially off-screen. In this
situation, the temporary position corresponds to the result of the
movement of the parent, while the pending (asynchronously configured)
position is the relative one given the new constraining result.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/705
MetaGravity is an enum, where the values match the X11 macros used for
gravity, with the exception that `ForgetGravity` was renamed
`META_GRAVITY_NONE` to have less of a obscure name.
The motivation for this is to rely less on libX11 data types and macros
in generic code.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/705
A placement rule placed window positions itself relative to its parent,
thus converting between relative coordinates to absolute coordinates,
then back to relative coordinates implies unwanted restrictions for
example when the absolute coordinate should not be calculated againts
the current parent window position.
Deal with this by keeping track of the relative position all the way
from the constraining engine to the move-resize window implementation.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/705
To organize things a bit better, put the fields related to the placement
rule state in its own anonymous struct inside MetaWindow. While at it,
rename the somewhat oddly named variable that in practice means the
current relative window position.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/705
There are two surface roles owning a MetaWindow: MetaWaylandShellSurface
(basis of MetaWaylandXdgToplevel, MetaWaylandXdgPopup,
MetaWaylandWlShellSurface, etc), and MetaXwaylandSurface.
With these two role types, the MetaWindow has two different types of
life times. With MetaWaylandShellSurface, the window is owned and
managed by the role itself, while with MetaXwaylandSurface, the
MetaWindow is tied to the X11 window, while the Wayland surface and its
role plays more the role of the backing rendering surface.
Before, for historical reasons, MetaWindow was part of
MetaWaylandSurface, even though just some roles used it, and before
'wayland: Untie MetaWindowXwayland lifetime from the wl_surface' had
equivalent life times as well. But since that commit, the management
changed. To not have the same fied in MetaWaylandSurface being managed
in such drastically different ways, rearrange it so that the roles that
has a MetaWindow themself manages it in the way it is meant to; meaning
MetaWaylandShellSurface practically owns it, while with Xwayland, the
existance of a MetaWindow is tracked via X11.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/835
Increase the number of checks whether a window is still responsive and
ping windows on every call to `meta_window_focus()` instead of
`meta_window_activate_full()`. This ensures the window is also pinged in
case normal interaction like clicks on the window happen and a close
dialog will eventually get shown.
Related https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/issues/395https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/891
When an X11 window requests an initial workspace, we currently trust
it that the workspace actually exists. However dynamic workspaces
make this easy to get wrong for applications: They make it likely
for the number of workspaces to change between application starts,
and if the app blindly applies its saved state on startup, it will
trigger an assertion.
Make sure that we pass valid parameters to set_workspace_state(),
and simply let the workspace assignment fall through to the default
handling otherwise.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/issues/1029
As we now call `meta_wayland_compositor_repick()` when the effects are
complete for Wayland surfaces, we can safely remove the Wayland specific
code to do the same from `meta_window_show()`.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/1026
In Wayland, window configuration is asynchronous. Window geometry is
constrained, the constrained geometry is sent to the client, and the
client will adapt its surface and acknowledge the configuration. When
acknowledged, we shouldn't reconstrain again, as that may invalidate the
constraint calculated for the configured size.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/907
The intention of meta_window_wayland_move_resize() is to finish a
move-resize requested previously, e.g. by a state change, or a
interactive resize. Make the function name carry this intention, by
renaming it to meta_window_wayland_finish_move_resize().
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/907
While most of the code to compute a window's layer isn't explicitly
windowing backend specific, it is in practice: On wayland there are
no DESKTOP windows(*), docks(*) or groups.
Reflect that by introducing a calculate_layer() vfunc that computes
(and sets) a window's layer.
(*) they shall burn in hell, amen!
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/949
Most of the layer computation that the stack does actually depends
on the windowing backend, so we will move it to a vfunc.
However before we do that, split out the bit that will be shared.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/949
Add an assert that we don't have a MetaWindow::monitor pointer that
points to an old MetaLogicalMonitor. After this, and the other
monitors-changed callbacks have been called, the old MetaLogicalMonitor
will be destoryed, thus if we didn't update the pointer here, we'll
point to freed memory, and will eventually crash later on.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/929
Override-redirect windows have no workspace by default, and can't be parent
of a top-level window, so we must check that the parent window is not an
O-R one when setting the workspace state.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/895
Otherwise we'll end up trying to access the out of date state later.
Fixes the following test failure backtrace:
#0 _g_log_abort ()
#1 g_logv ()
#2 g_log ()
#3 meta_monitor_manager_get_logical_monitor_from_number ()
#4 meta_window_get_work_area_for_monitor ()
#5 meta_window_get_tile_area ()
#6 constrain_maximization ()
#7 do_all_constraints ()
#8 meta_window_constrain ()
#9 meta_window_move_resize_internal ()
#10 meta_window_tile ()
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/912
Add an adjust_fullscreen_monitor_rect virtual method to MetaWindowClass
and call this from setup_constraint_info() if the window is fullscreen.
This allows MetaWindowClass to adjust the monitor-rectangle used to size
the window when going fullscreen, which will be used in further commits
for a workaround related to fullscreen games under Xwayland.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/739
If window decoration is modified within a short period of time, mutter
sometimes starts processing the second request before the first
UnmapNotify event has been received. In this situation, it considers
that the window is not mapped and does not expect another UnmapNotify /
MapNotify event sequence to happen.
This adds a separate counter to keep track of the pending reparents. The
input focus is then restored when MapNotify event is received iff all
the expected pending ReparentNotify events have been received.
Signed-off-by: Rémi Bernon <rbernon@codeweavers.com>
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/657
When double clicking to un-maximize an X11 window under Wayland, there
is a race between X11 and Wayland protocols and the X11 XConfigureWindow
may be processed by Xwayland before the button press event is forwarded
via the Wayland protocol.
As a result, the second click may reach another X11 window placed right
underneath in the X11 stack.
Make sure we do not forward the button press event to Wayland if it was
handled by the frame UI.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/issues/88
Commit 09bab98b1e tried to avoid several workspace changes while in
window construction, but it missed a case:
If we have a window on a secondary monitor with no workspaces enabled
(so it implicitly gets on_all_workspaces = TRUE without requesting it)
and trigger the creation of a second window that has the first as
transient-for, it would first try to set the first workspace than the
transient-for window and then fallback to all/current workspace.
After that commit we only try to set the same workspace than the
transient-for window, but it gets none as neither is on a single workspace,
nor did really request to be on all workspaces.
Fixes crashes when opening transient X11 dialogs in the secondary monitor.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/714
We first set the workspace to the transient-for parent's, and then
try to set on the current workspace. If both happen, we double the
work on adding/removing it from the workspace, and everything that
happens in result.
Should reduce some activity while typing on the Epiphany address
bar, as the animation results in a number of xdg_popup being created
and destroyed to handle the animation.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/issues/556
As per commit 040de396b, we don't try to grab when shortcuts are inhibited,
However, this uses the focus window assuming that it is always set, while this
might not be the case in some scenarios (like when unsetting the focus before
requesting take-focus-window to acquire the input).
So allow the button grab even if the focus window is not set for the display
Closes: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/issues/663https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/668
On Wayland, if a client issues a inhibit-shortcut request, the Wayland
compositor will disable its own shortcuts.
We should also disable the default handler for the button grab modifier
so that button events with the window grab modifiers pressed are not
caught by the compositor but are forwarded to the client surface.
That also fixes the same issue with Xwayland applications issuing grabs,
as those end up being emulated like shortcut inhibition.
Closes: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/issues/642
When we're unfullscreening, we might be returning to a window state that
has its size either managed by constraints (tiled, maximized), or not
(floating). Lets just pass the configure size 0x0 when we're not using
constrained sizes (i.e. the window going from being fullscreen to not
maximized) and let the application decide how to size itself.
Fixes: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/issues/638https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/621
In all places (including src/wayland) we tap into meta_x11_display* focus
API, which then calls meta_display* API. This relation is backwards, so
rework input focus management so it's the other way around.
We now have high-level meta_display_(un)set_input_focus functions, which
perform the backend-independent maintenance, and calls into the X11
functions where relevant. These functions are what callers should use.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/420
We use a GtkIconTheme (thus icon-theme, thus xsettings, thus x11) just to
grab a "missing icon" icon to show in place. Relax this requirement that
surfaces for icon/mini-icon will be set, and just let it have NULL here.
It seems better to have the callers (presumably UI layers) aware of this
and set a proper icon by themselves, but AFAICS there is none in sight,
not even plain mutter seems to use MetaWindow::[mini-]icon. Probably
worth a future cleanup.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/420
We'd break the loop for moving attached windows at the first window,
meaning we'd only ever move a single attached dialogs or popup if it was
the first window in the list. This doesn't work out well when there are
multiple popups open, so don't break out of the loop at all until all
windows are potentially moved.
This fixes an issue in gtk4 where one or more non-grabbing popups would
end up unattached if there were more than one and the parent window was
moved.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/592
This function was added for historic reasons, before that we had GSlist's
free_full function.
Since this can be now easily implemented with a function call and an explicit
GDestroyFunc, while no known dependency uses it let's move to use
g_slist_free_func instead.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/57
When an application stops responding, the shell darkens its windows.
If a window from a not-responding application gets unmanaged
then the shell will currently throw an exception trying to retrieve
the now-dissociated window actor.
That leads to a "stuck window" ghost on screen and a traceback
in the log.
This commit addresses the problem by making sure the effect is cleaned
up before the actor is disocciated from its window.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/issues/575
If a client maps a persistent popup with a placement rule, then resizes
the parent window so that the popup ends up outside of the parent,
unmanage the popup and log a warning about the client being buggy.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/496
When a parent window is moved, attached windows (attached modal dialogs
or popups) is moved with it. This is problematic when such a window
hasn't been shown yet (e.g. a popup that has been configured but not
shown), as it'll mean we try to constrain an empty window. Avoid this
issue by not trying to auto-move empty windows.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/496
As per commit 43633d6b, we mark an unmanaging window as not focusable, while
this is true, it might cause not resetting the current focused window when
unmanaging it causing a crash.
Also this wouldn't allow to check if a window can be focused when unmanaging it,
so let's revert the previous behavior.
Fixes: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/issues/462
For various error and warning messages, mutter includes a description of
the window, and that description includes a snippet of the title of the
window. Those snippets find their way into system logs, which then means
they can potentially find their way into bug reports and similar. Remove
the window title information to eliminate this potential privacy issue.
Commit 25f416c13d added additional compilation warnings, including
-Werror=return-type. There are several places where this results
in build failures if `g_assert_not_reached()` is disabled at compile
time and the compiler misses a return value.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/issues/447
It's a UI pattern that has been superseded by client-side decorations,
apps that used to set the hint have generally moved on to headerbars.
Given that and the limitation to server-side decorated X11 windows,
GTK4 removed the client-side API for setting the hint, it's time to
follow suite and retire the feature.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/221
Commit 8d3e05305 ("window: Force update monitor on hot plugs") added the
flag `META_WINDOW_UPDATE_MONITOR_FLAGS_FORCE` passed to
`update_monitor()` from `update_for_monitors_changed()`.
However, `update_for_monitors_changed()` may choose to call another code
path to `move_between_rects()` and `meta_window_move_resize_internal()`
eventually.
As `meta_window_move_resize_internal()` does not use the "force" flag,
we may still end up in case where the window->monitor is left unchanged.
To avoid that problem, add a new `MetaMoveResizeFlags` that
`update_for_monitors_changed()` can use to force the monitor update from
`meta_window_move_resize_internal()`.
Fixes: 8d3e05305 ("window: Force update monitor on hot plugs")
Closes: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/issues/189
It relied on indices in arrays determining tile direction and
non-obvious bitmask logic to translate to _GTK_EDGE_CONSTRAINTS. Change
this to explicitly named edge constraints, and clear translation methods
that converts between mutters and GTK+s edge constraint formats.
The order and way include macros were structured was chaotic, with no
real common thread between files. Try to tidy up the mess with some
common scheme, to make things look less messy.
In order to allow a window with a custom rule placement to be moved
together with its parent, the final rule used derived from the
constraining were used for subsequent constraints. This was not enough
as some constraining cannot be translated into a rule, such as sliding
across some axis.
Instead, make it a bit simpler and just remember the position relative
to the parent window, and use that the next time.
This is a rework of 5376c31a33 which
caused the unwanted side effects.
Fixes: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/issues/332
With Wayland, a window is not showing until it's shown. Until this
patch, the initial state of MetaWindow, on the other hand, was that a
window is initialized as showing. This means that for a window to
actually be classified as shown (MetaWindow::hidden set to FALSE),
something would first have to hide it.
Normally, this wasn't an issue, as normally we'd first create a window,
determine it shouldn't be visible (due to missing buffer), hide it
before the next paint, then eventually show it. This doesn't work if
mutter isn't drawing any frames at the moment (e.g. the user switched
VT), as we'd miss the hiding before showing as e result of a buffer
being attached. The most visible side effect is that a window can't be
moved as the window actor remains frozen.
This commit fixes this issue by correctly classifying a newly created
Wayland window as "hidden".
Fixes: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/issues/331
Changes in window decoration result in the window being reparented
in and out its frame. This in turn causes unmap/map events, and
XI_FocusOut if the window happened to be focused.
In order to preserve the focused window across the decoration change,
add a flag so that the focus may be restored on MapNotify.
Closes: #273
On Wayland, xdg-foreign would leave a modal dialog managed even after
the imported surface is destroyed.
This is sub-optimal and this breaks the atomic relationship one would
expect between the parent and its modal dialog.
Make sure we unmanage the dialog if transient_for is unset even for
Wayland native windows.
Related: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/issues/174
Related: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/issues/221
A window placed using a placement rule should keep that relative
position even if the parent window moves, as the position tied to the
parent window, not to the stage. Thus, if the parent window moves, the
child window should move with it.
In the implementation in this commit, the constraints engine is not
used when repositioning the children; the window is simply positioned
according to the effective placement rule that was derived from the
initial constraining, as the a xdg_popup at the moment cannot move
(relative its parent) after being mapped.
Closes: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/issues/274
Commit a3da4b8d5b changed updating of
window monitors to always use take affect when it was done from a
non-user operation. This could cause feed back loops when a non-user
driven operation would trigger the changing of a monitor, which itself
would trigger changing of the monitor again due to a window scale
change.
The reason for the change, was that when the window monitor changed due
to a hot plug, if it didn't actually change, eventually the window
monitor pointer would be pointing to freed memory.
Instead of force updating the monitor on all non-user operations, just
do it on hot plugs. This allows for the feedback loop preventing logic
to still do what its supposed to do, without risking dangling pointers
on hot plugs.
Related: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/issues/189
Closes: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/issues/192
The bool determines whether the call was directly from a user operation
or not. To add more state into the call without having to add more
boolenas, change the boolean to a flag (so far with 'none' and 'user-op'
as possible values). No functional changes were made.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/issues/192
Since commit b3b9d9e16 we no longer have to pass the unmanaging window
to make sure we don't try to focus it again, however the parameter also
influences the focus policy by giving ancestors preference over the normal
stack order.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/issues/15
We refuse to move focus while a grab operation is in place. While this
generally makes sense, there's no reason why the window that owns the
grab shouldn't be given the regular input focus as well - we pretty
much assume that the grab window is also the focus window anyway.
In fact there's a strong reason for allowing the focus change here:
If the grab window isn't the focus window, it probably has a modal
transient that is focused instead, and a likely reason for the focus
request is that the transient is being unmanaged and we must move
the focus elsewhere.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/issues/15
Previously we relied on the test-client to make sure that a window was
shown. For X11, we did not need to do anything, but for Wayland we had
to make sure we had drawn the first frame, otherwise mutter wouldn't
have a buffer making the window not showable.
Doing it this way doesn't work anymore however, since the 'after-paint'
event will be emitted even if we didn't actually paint anything. This is
the case with current Gtk under Wayland, where we won't draw until the
compositor has configured the surface. In effect, this mean we'll get a
dummy after-paint emission before the first frame is actually painted.
Instead, move the verification that a "show" command has completed by
having the test-runner wait for a "shown" signal on the window, which is
emitted in the end of meta_window_show(). This requires an additional
call to gdk_display_sync() in the test-client after creating the window,
to make sure that the window creation vents has been received in the
compositor.
- Stop using CurrentTime, introduce META_CURRENT_TIME
- Use g_get_monotonic_time () instead of relying on an
X server running and making roundtrip to it
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=759538
This moves following objects from MetaScreen to MetaDisplay
- workareas_later and in_fullscreen_later signals and functions
- startup_sequences signals and functions
- tile_preview functions
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=759538
Split X11 specific parts into MetaX11Display. This also required
changing MetaScreen to stop listening to any signals by itself, but
instead relying on MetaDisplay forwarding them. This was to ensure the
ordering. MetaDisplay listens to both the internal and external
monitors-changed signal so that it can pass the external one via the
redundant MetaDisplay(prev MetaScreen)::monitors-changed.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=759538
They are X11 specific functions, used for X11 code. They have been
improved per jadahl's suggestion to use gdk_x11_lookup_xdisplay and
gdk_x11_display_error_trap_* functions, instead of current code.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=759538
- Moved xdisplay, name and various atoms from MetaDisplay
- Moved xroot, screen_name, default_depth and default_xvisual
from MetaScreen
- Moved some X11 specific functions from screen.c and display.c
to meta-x11-display.c
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=759538
In the old, synchronous X.org world, we could assume that
a state change always meant a synchronizing the window
geometry right after. After firing an operation that
would change the window state, such as maximizing or
tiling the window,
With Wayland, however, this is not valid anymore, since
Wayland is asynchronous. In this scenario, we call
meta_window_move_resize_internal() twice: when the user
executes an state-changing operation, and when the server
ACKs this operation. This breaks the previous assumptions,
and as a consequence, it breaks the GNOME Shell animations
in Wayland.
The solution is giving the MetaWindow control over the time
when the window geometry is synchronized with the compositor.
That is done by introducing a new result flag. Wayland asks
for a compositor sync after receiving an ACK from the server,
while X11 asks for it right away.
Fixes#78
Raising and lowering windows in tandem without a proper grouping
mechanism ended up being more annoying than functional.
This reverts commit e76a0f564c.
When painting the titlebar, button icons that aren't available in the
desired size need to be scaled. However the current code inverses the
scale factor, with the result that the adjusted icons are much worse
than the original icons, whoops.
This went unnoticed for a long time given that most icons are availa-
ble in the desired 16x16 size, and the most likely exceptions - window
icons - are not shown by default.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/issues/23
When maximizing a window, the previous location is saved so that
un-maximize would restore the same original window location.
However, if a Wayland client starts with a window maximized, the
previous location will be 0x0, so if we have to force placement in
xdg_toplevel_set_maximized(), we should update the location as well so
that the window is placed on the right monitor when un-maximizing.
For that purpose, add a new flag to force the update of the window
location, and use that flag from xdg_toplevel_set_maximized().
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=783901
Wayland clients know their size better, so for Wayland we'd rather not
try to resize the client on un-maximize, but for this to work we need a
new MetaMoveResizeFlags.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=783901
When closing a window and showing a new one, the new one may not be
granted input focus until it gets a buffer on Wayland.
If another window is chosen to receive focus and raised on top of stack,
the newly mapped window is focused but placed underneath that other
window.
Meaning that for Wayland surfaces, we need to defer adding the window to
the stack until we actually get to show it, once we have a buffer
attached.
Rather that checking the windowing backend prior to decide if a window
is stackable or not, introduce a new vfunc is_stackable() which tells
if a window should be added to the stack regardless of the underlying
windowing system.
Also add meta_window_is_in_stack() API rather than checking the stack
position directly (replacing the define WINDOW_IN_STACK only available
in stack.c) and remove a window from the stack only if it is present
in the stack, so that the test in meta_stack_remote() becomes
irrelevant.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=780820
MetaWindowXwayland derives from MetaWindowX11 to allow for some Xwayland
specific vfunc that wouldn't apply to plain X11 windows, such as
shortcut inhibit routines.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=783342
When we received two hot plug events that both resulted in headless
configuration, we tried to find a new window monitor given the old.
That resulted in a null pointer dereference; avoid that by only trying
to find the same monitor if there was an old one.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=788607
GTK has the ability to handle client-decorated windows
in such a way that the behavior of these windows must
match the behavior of the current window manager.
In Mutter, windows can be tiled horizontally (and, in
the future, vertically as well), which comes with a few
requirements that the toolkit must supply. Tiled windows
have their borders' behavior changed depending on the
tiled position, and the toolkit must be aware of this
information in order to properly match the window manager
behavior.
In order to provide toolkits with more precise and general
data regarding resizable and constrained edges, this patch
makes MetaWindow track its own edge constraints.
This will later be used by the backends to send information
to the toolkit.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=751857
When computing a potential match for a tiled window, there is a
chance we face the case where 2 windows really complement each
other's tile mode (i.e. left and right) but they have different
sizes, and their borders don't really touch each other.
In that case, the current code would mistakenly assume they're
tile matches, and would resize them with either a hole or an
overlapping area between windows. This is clearly a misbehavior
that is a consequence of the previous assumptions pre-resizable
tiles.
This patch adapts the tile match algorithm to also consider the
touching edges when computing the matching tile, unless:
* the window is not currently tiled (for example when computing
the tile preview)
* the window is currently resized in tandem with an existing
tile match
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=645153
bar
When a pair of tiled windows are grouped together, they
are treated as parts of a whole and interacting with one
affects the other.
Following the idea that sibling tiled windows are treated
as part of the same group, they should also be raised and
lowered together.
It is still possible to break tiled windows grouping by
simply untiling the window with the keyboard or by grabbing
and resizing or moving the window with the cursor.
This patch makes sibling tiled windows be lowered and raised
in tandem. For future reference, this behavior is documented
in [1].
[1] https://wiki.gnome.org/GeorgesNeto/MinutesOfFeaneron/Tilinghttps://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=645153
When windows are tiled, it improves the interaction with
them when they have a set of snapping edges relative to
the monitor. For example, when there's a document editor
and a PDF file opened, I might want to rescale the former
to 2/3 of the screen and the latter to 1/3.
These snapping sections are not really tied to any other
window, and only depend on the current work area of the
window. Thus, it is not necessary to adapt the current
snapping edge detection algorithm.
This patch adds the necessary code in edge-resistance.c
to special-case tiled windows and allow them to cover
1/4, 1/3 and 1/2 (horizontally) of the screen. These
values are hardcoded.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=645153
After the introduction of the possibility to resize tiled windows,
it is a sensible decision to make windows aware of their tiling
match. A tiling match is another window that is tiled in such a
way that is the complement of the current window.
The newly introduced behavior attepts to make tiling as smooth as
possible, with the following rules:
* Windows now compute their tile match when tiling and, if there's
a match, they automatically complement the sibling's width.
* Resizing a window with a sibling automatically resizes the sibling
too to be the complement of the window's width.
* It is not possible to resize below windows' minimum widths.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=645153
Now that tiled windows are resizable, the user may grow a tiled
windows until it covers the entire work area. As this makes the
window state mostly indistinguishable from maximization, avoid
subtle differences by properly maximizing the window in that case.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=645153
Currently tiled windows are not resizable and their size is fixed
to half the screen width. Adjust the code to work with fractions
other than half, and allow users to adjust the split by dragging
the window edge that is not constrained by a monitor edge.
Follow-up patches will improve on that by resizing neighboring
tiled windows by a shared edge, and making the functionality
available to client-side decorated windows implementing the
new edge constraints protocol.
Now that the preview tile mode has been split from the window's
tile_mode property, it is much more natural to pass the requested
tile_mode to the tile() function instead of setting it externally
and calling the function to apply the state.
The existing semantics of the tile_mode property are terribly confusing,
as it depends on some other property whether it represents the requested
or current mode. Clear this up by just using separate variables for the
two. As it is unlikely that we will ever support more than one tile
preview, we can track the requested mode globally instead of adding
another per-window variable.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=645153
Automatic maximization is done when a window is almost the size of the
work area of a monitor. This makes no sense to try when there is no
monitor available, so skip trying to do this when headless.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=787637
When we are headless, treat this as if the window is always not monitor
sized. This might cause windows to temporarly become redirected while
being headless, but this is harmless as when a new monitor is
connected, we'll recalculate weather it should be redirected or not.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=787637
Also adds a soft assert to meta_window_is_on_primary_monitor() to make
it easier to spot when callers might want to handle headless
in a certain way.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=730551
For now we abuse of meta_window_get_flatpak_id not to break the APIs,
so that it's working seamlessly in gnone shell too.
Rename flatpak_id to sandboxed_app_id internally to get prepared to the future
API.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=788217
This avoids updating state (such as position, size etc) when going
headless. Eventually, when non-headless, things will be updated again,
and not until then will we be able to update to a valid state.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=730551
If there are no active logical monitors, don't try to dereference a
NULL one to get a preferred output winsys id. Instead just set an
invalid one.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=730551
Add a mechanism to MetaWaylandSurface that inhibits compositor's own
shortcuts when the surface has input focus, so that clients can receive
all key events regardless of the compositor own shortcuts.
This will help with implementing "fake" active grabs in Wayland and
XWayland clients.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=783342
When updating the main monitor, make sure to update the toplevel main
monitor before trying to use that as the main monitor for non-toplevel
windows (such as popups). Without this, when the main monitor is
updated as a side effect to monitors being changed (for example due to
a hot plug event, or coming back from being suspended) the
main monitor pointer may, after 'monitors-changed' has completed, point to
freed memory resulting in undefined behaviour.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=784867
This is used to request key focus on the close dialog whenever
a window that is frozen would receive key focus. Also, ensure
that the dialog gets focus when first shown if the window was
meant to receive input.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=762083
When moving a window between two non-adjecent logical monitors, don't
try to tile a window when the window position is outside of any logical
monitor.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=783630
While it doesn't make sense to set a window as transient to
itself, our existing check whether making a window transient
doesn't cover it, so it's still possible to create an infinite
loop.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=783502
For size change animations, plugins rely on the size change effect being
followed by size changed signal (or effects being kill altogether).
However unless the move_resize operation included the STATE_CHANGED flag,
the size changed event emitted when the compositor syncs the window
geometry only happens when the operation resulted in an actual change.
To avoid animations getting stuck in that case, make sure to include the
flag when tiling a window.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=783293
Call meta_compositor_size_change_window while tiling in order
to emit the size-change signal. Since the untiling action is
considered a unmaximize size change, treat tiling as a maximize
size change for consistency.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=782968
When terminating mutter running as a display server, don't try to resize
maximized windows when unmanaging, as at this point, they will have no
MetaWaylandSurface. Originally this was done instead of setting the
net_wm_state to not mess with future window managers, but when we're a
Wayland compositor, this does not matter.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=782156
When a state changed, e.g. a window went from unfullscreen to
fullscreen, always sync the window geometry, otherwise a compositor
application (e.g. gnome-shell) might end up with an unfinished window
state transition effect.
Without always syncing, the compositor plugin will see a 'size-change'
event, as a result of the state change, but if the size didn't change,
it would never see the 'size-changed' event. If an effect, for example
gnome-shell's fullscreen effect, is triggered on 'size-change' it might
rely on the actual size change to not get stuck. This commit allows it
to have this dependency.
This fixes a bug where a fullscreen effect gets "stuck" when a window
goes fullscreen without changing the window geometry.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=780292
Wayland windows are initially zero sized until clients commit the
first buffer. Despite being invisible, clients are allowed to request
such windows to be fullscreened on a specific output before they
attach the first buffer which means we need to be able to move them.
meta_window_move_to_monitor() doesn't handle this case because these
windows' initial monitor is a placeholder since their initial
coordinates are 0,0+0+0, which results in us using a rectangle as
old_area for meta_window_move_between_rects() that might be to the "right"
of the window causing the move to go further out of the visible
screen's coordinates. This is later "corrected" by the constraints
system but the window might end up in the wrong monitor.
To fix this, we can make meta_window_move_between_rects() accept a
NULL old_area, meaning that we move the window to the new_area without
trying to keep a relative position.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=772525
Instead of storing the logical monitors in an array and having users
either look up them in the array given an index or iterate using
indices, put it in a GList, and use GList iterators when iterating and
alternative API where array indices were previously used.
This allows for more liberty regarding the type of the logical monitor.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=777732
Rewrite check_fullscreen_func to not use indexes (and
offset-index-as-pointer) tricks. This also removes the usage of an API
constructing temporary logical monitor arrays carrying indices.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=777732
Let the backend initialize the cursor tracker, and change all call
sites to get the cursor tracker from the backend instead of from the
screen. It wasn't associated with the screen anyway, so the API was
missleading.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=777732
Instead of keeping around array indexes, keep track of them by storing
a pointer instead. This also changes from using an array (imitating the
X11 behaviour) to more explicit storing.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=777732
To complement the current API which takes an index referencing a
logical monitor in the logical monitor array, add API that takes a
direct reference to the logical monitor itself. The intention is to
replace the usage of the index based API with one that doesn't rely on
internal implementation details.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=777732
It was just pointer to the actual list; having to synchronize a list of
logical monitors with the actual monitors managed by the backend is
unnecessary.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=777732
The fullscreen monitors state is set given a set of xinerama monitor
identification numbers. When the monitor configuration changes (e.g. by
a hotplug event) these are no longer valid, and may point to
uninitialized or unallocated data. Avoid accessing
uninitialized/unallocated memory by clearing the fullscreen monitor
state when the monitor configuration changes.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=777732
In preparation for further refactorizations, rename the MetaMonitorInfo
struct to MetaLogicalMonitor. Eventually, part of MetaLogicalMonitor
will be split into a MetaMonitor type.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=777732
We currently only focus unfocused windows on button press if no
modifiers (or just ignored modifiers) are in effect. This behavior
seems surprising and counter-intuitive so let's do it for any modifier
combination instead.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=746642
A window's unconstrained_rect is essentially just the target rectangle
we hand to meta_window_move_resize_internal() except it's not updated
until the window actually moves or resizes.
As such, for wayland client resizes, since they're async, using
window->unconstrained_rect right after calling move_resize_internal()
to update the grab anchor position on unmaximize doesn't work as it
does for X clients.
To fix this, we can just use the target rectangle for the grab
anchor. Note that comment here was already wrong since it says we
should be taking constraints into account and yet the code used the
unconstrained rect anyway.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=770345
In order for the compositor plugin to be able to animate window size
changes properly we need to let it know of the starting and final
window sizes.
For X clients this can be done synchronously and thus with a single
call into the compositor plugin since it's us (the window manager)
who's in charge of the final window size.
Wayland clients though, have the final say over their window size
since it's determined from the client allocated buffer.
This patch moves the meta_compositor_size_change_window() calls before
move_resize_internal() which lets the compositor plugin know the old
window size and freezes the MetaWindowActor.
Then we get rid of the META_MOVE_RESIZE_DONT_SYNC_COMPOSITOR flag
since it's not needed anymore as the window actor is frozen and that
means we can use meta_compositor_sync_window_geometry() as the point
where we inform the compositor plugin of the final window size.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=770345
mutter would remove focus from a toplevel when showing one of its
transient window which is not on top and not focused.
When using xdg_popup without grab as allowed in xdg_shell v6, the popup
wouldn't be focused, and if an intermediate event occurs before the
popup is shown, it's not placed on top either, which could randomly
trigger a loss of focus in the corresponding toplevel window.
Remove that special case, it doesn't make much sense to globally unset
focus when mapping a new window.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=773210
GNOME Shell's window matching currently fails frequently with Flatpak
applications, as one of the primary hints used to link windows with
.desktop files - the WM_CLASS - no longer matches when flatpak renames
the exported .desktop file. Luckily, Flatpak provides us with a fail-safe
way to map from the PID to the corresponding application ID, so expose an
appropriate method that allows GNOME Shell to reliably match windows to
the corresponding Flatpak app.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=772614
It is often useful to identify the client process that created
a particular window, however the existing meta_window_get_pid()
method relies on _NET_WM_PID, which is only available on X11 and
depends on applications to set it correctly (which may not even
be possible when the app runs in its own PID namespace as Flatpak
apps do). So add a get_client_pid() method that uses windowing
system facilities to resolve the PID associated with a particular
window.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=772613
When a modal transient is unmanaging, most likely the parent of the
modal transient should be focused.
In Wayland, a MetaWindow is created when a shell surface role (like
xdg_toplevel) is created, but a window cannot be shown until a buffer
is attached. If a client would create two modal transients and make
them both have the same parent, but only one get a buffer attached
(i.e. shown), when unmanaging the modal transient that was showing,
when finding a new focus candidate, the stacking code will ignore the
not-to-be-shown buffer-less modal transient when finding a good
candidate for focusing. In the case described here, this means it will
find the parent of the unmanaging modal transient.
This newly chosen candidate will then be passed to meta_window_focus();
meta_window_focus() will then try to find any modal transient to focus
instead, will find the one without any buffer, then fail to focus it
because it cannot be mapped, thus making meta_window_focus() not focus
anything. Since meta_window_focus() didn't change any focus state, the
assert in meta_window_unmanage() checking that the unmanaging window
isn't focused anymore will be hit, causing mutter to abort.
For now, fix this by checking whether the modal transient can actually
be focused in meta_window_focus(). For X11 client windows, a window
will be defined to be focusable always, but for Wayland client windows,
a window will be determined focusable only if it has a buffer attached.
In the future, we should probably do a more thorough refactorization of
focus handling to get rid of any X11 - Wayland differences.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=757568
Even without a compositor grab, key events may still be expected to
be processed by the compositor and not applications, for instance
when using ctrl-alt-tab to keynav in the top bar. On X11, focus is
moved to the stage window in that case, so that events are processed
before they are dispatched by the window manager. On wayland, we need
to handle this case ourselves, so make sure to not pass key events to
wayland in that case, and move the key focus back to the stage when
appropriate.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=758167
For some reason, when a modal dialog was made an attaching
transient-for, if the window wasn't "constructing", it would be
unmanaged and rely on some side effect to be recreated. This side
effect is not triggered for Wayland clients, thus if one happen to set
a surface as "modal" via gtk_surface.set_modal before
xdg_toplevel.set_parent, it'd be unmanaged and never show up.
Instead, simply just set the tranciency anyway for Wayland clients.
This makes GTK+ clients that set_modal() before set_transient_for()
work.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=770324
Windows from Xwayland still needs to use the Wayland path, but is
represented an MetaWindowX11, thus the abstraction introduced in
"window: Make meta_window_has_pointer() per protocol implemented"
is wrong. Lets turn back time, and reconsider how this can be
abstracted more correctly in the future.
This reverts commit 9fb891d216.
Add support for assigning a window a custom window placement rule used
for calculating the initial window position as well as defining how a
window is constrained.
The custom rule is a declarative rule which defines a set of parameters
which the placing algorithm and constrain algorithm uses for
calculating the position of a window. It is meant to be used to
implement positioning of menus and other popup windows created via
Wayland.
A custom placement rule replaces any other placement or constraint
rule.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=769936
This layer isn't really being used and in fact, it causes
meta_stack_get_default_focus_window() to return a fullscreen window
even if the naturally topmost window in the stack isn't a fullscreen
one.
Note that commit a3bf9b01aa changed how
we choose the default focus window from the MRU to the topmost in the
stack.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=768221
printf string precision counts bytes so we may end up creating invalid
UTF-8 strings here. Instead, use glib's unicode aware methods to clip
the title.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=765535
If we try to send notify event (either from surface_state_changed()
or from meta_window_wayland_move_resize_internal()),
we will crash, because we don't have a sufrace anymore.
There's no reason why to resize the window that is being
unmanaged anyway.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=751847
Each wl_surface.commit with a newly attached buffer should result in
one wl_buffer.release for the attached buffer. For example attaching
the same buffer to two different surfaces must always result in two
wl_buffer.release events being emitted by the server. The client is
responsible for counting the wl_buffer.release events and be sure to
have received as many release events as it has attached and committed
the buffer, before reusing it.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=762828
If a broken or naughty application tries set up its windows to create
a loop in the transient relationship, mutter will hang, looping forever
in meta_window_foreach_ancestor()
To avoid looping infinitely at various point in the code, check for a
possible loop when setting the transient relationship and deny the
request to set a window transient for another if that would create a
loop.
Bugzilla: https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=759299
The new tiling code, instead of based around "tiling states", is instead
based around constrained edges. This allows us to have windows that have
three constrained edges, but keep one free-floating, e.g. a window tiled
to the left has the left, top, and bottom edges constrained, but the
right edge can be left resizable.
This system also is easily extended to support corner tiling. We also,
using the new "size state" system, also keep normal, tiled, and
maximized sizes independently, allowing the maximize button to bounce
between maximized and tiled states without reverting to normal in
between. Dragging from the top will always restore the normal state,
though.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=751857
In case a window is hidden when we're ordered to make it transient to
a different parent we must re-evaluate its visibility status or we'll
get into an inconsistent state where the parent is visible and the
child isn't.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=759297
This seems like a more generally useful and intuitive behavior. Note
that, in X sessions, this is what already happened in practice since
meta_display_begin_grab_op() calls meta_window_grab_all_keys() which,
on X11, does meta_window_focus().
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=756789
Don't update the stack until after setting the window->transient_for
field. Updating before will cause the stack transient-for constraint to
be missing until the next time constraints are applied.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=755606
Wine removes the minimize func from its Motif hints on full-screen
windows, because, as the Win32 API literally says, the minimize button
is indeed not visible on full-screen windows.
Given that this code was added to prevent minimizing a panel by
accident, I don't necessarily think that it's relevant anymore.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=758186
When managing window, we queue showing the window.
Under wayland, if we commit surface quickly enough,
the showing is unqueued and commit procedure takes care
of mapping and placing the window. In the oposite case,
queue is processed before client sets all we need and
then we have wrong size of window, which leads to broken placement.
Therefore force placement in queue only if the window should already
be mapped. If it is not mapped, we don't care where it is anyway.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=751887
Displaying all Wayland windows with the XID of 0x0 makes it hard
to figure out what is going on ... use the recently-added
window->stamp to show Wayland windows as W1/W2/W3...
This was introduced in commit c6793d477a
to prevent window self-maximisation. It turns out that that bug seems
to have been fixed meanwhile in a different way since the reproducer
in https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=461927#c37 now works
fine with this special handling removed.
In fact, failing to set window->fullscreen immediately when loading
the initial set of X properties causes us to create a UI frame for a
window that sets _NET_WM_STATE_FULLSCREEN.
This, in turn, might cause the fullscreen constrain code to fail if
the window also sets min_width/min_height size hints to be the monitor
size since the UI frame size added to those makes the rectangle too
big to fit the monitor. If the window doesn't set these hints, we
fullscreen it but the window will get sized such that the UI frame is
taken into account while it really shouldn't (see the reproducer
above).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=753020
Since we scale surface actors given what main output their toplevel
window is on, also scale the window geometry coordinates and sizes
(window->rect size and window->custom_frame_extents.top/left) in order
to make the window geometry represent what is being rendered on the
stage.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=744934
The main monitor of a window is maintained as 'window->monitor' and is
updated when the window is resized or moved. Lets avoid calculating it
every time it`s needed.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=744934
A much less hacky version of maximize / unmaximize is reimplemented
in terms of this, but it could also eventually be used for fullscreen /
unfullscreen, and tile / untile.
This is an extremely niche feature, and conflicts with the rest of our
interface being consistent about not allowing resizing while tiled or
maximized.
Going from fullscreen to unfullscreen involves a frame border size, so
in order to properly interpret the saved rect size, we need to make sure
that the frame borders are fully up to date.
The "calc showing" operation is queued in a few places alongside MetaWindow
creation, we should be ignoring these until there is a buffer to show.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=750552