When a touch sequence was rejected, we'd update the event timestamps of
incoming touch events to help with implementing grabs. This was done by
sending a ClientMessage with a counter, and comparing the counter to
decide whether we're seing a replayed event or not.
This had the unforseen consequence that we would potentially end up
destroying all actors including the stage, since, when mutter receives a
ClientMessage event, it would assume that it's a WM_PROTOCOLS event, and
handle it as such. The problem with this approach is that it would
ignore fact that there might be other ClientMessage types sent to it,
for example the touch synchronization one. What could happen is that the
touch count value would match up with the value of the WM_DELETE_WINDOW
atom, clutter would treat this as WM_PROTOCOLS:WM_DELETE_WINDOW, which
it'd translate to clutter_actor_destroy(stage).
Destroying the stage in such a way is not expected, and caused wierd
crashes in different places depending on what was going on.
This commit make sure we only treat WM_PROTOCOLS client messages as
WM_PROTOCOLS client messages effectively avoiding the issue.
This fixes crashes such as:
#0 meta_window_get_buffer_rect (window=0x0, rect=rect@entry=0x7ffd7fc62e40) at core/window.c:4396
#1 0x00007f1e2634837f in get_top_visible_window_actor (compositor=0x297d700, compositor=0x297d700) at compositor/compositor.c:1059
#2 meta_compositor_sync_stack (compositor=0x297d700, stack=<optimized out>, stack@entry=0x26e3140) at compositor/compositor.c:1176
#3 0x00007f1e263757ac in meta_stack_tracker_sync_stack (tracker=0x297dbc0) at core/stack-tracker.c:871
#4 0x00007f1e26375899 in stack_tracker_sync_stack_later (data=<optimized out>) at core/stack-tracker.c:881
#5 0x00007f1e26376914 in run_repaint_laters (laters_list=0x7f1e2663b7d8 <laters+24>) at core/util.c:809
#6 run_all_repaint_laters (data=<optimized out>) at core/util.c:826
#7 0x00007f1e26b18325 in _clutter_run_repaint_functions (flags=flags@entry=CLUTTER_REPAINT_FLAGS_PRE_PAINT) at clutter-main.c:3448
#8 0x00007f1e26b18fc5 in master_clock_update_stages (master_clock=0x32d6a80, stages=0x4e5a740) at clutter-master-clock-default.c:437
#9 clutter_clock_dispatch (source=<optimized out>, callback=<optimized out>, user_data=<optimized out>) at clutter-master-clock-default.c:567
#10 0x00007f1e27e48049 in g_main_dispatch (context=0x225b8d0) at gmain.c:3175
#11 g_main_context_dispatch (context=context@entry=0x225b8d0) at gmain.c:3828
#12 0x00007f1e27e483a8 in g_main_context_iterate (context=0x225b8d0, block=block@entry=1, dispatch=dispatch@entry=1, self=<optimized out>) at gmain.c:3901
#13 0x00007f1e27e4867a in g_main_loop_run (loop=0x24e29f0) at gmain.c:4097
#14 0x00007f1e2636a3dc in meta_run () at core/main.c:666
#15 0x000000000040219c in main (argc=1, argv=0x7ffd7fc63238) at ../src/main.c:534
and
#0 0x00007f93943c1f25 in raise () at /usr/lib/libc.so.6
#1 0x00007f93943ab897 in abort () at /usr/lib/libc.so.6
#2 0x00007f9393e1e062 in g_assertion_message (domain=<optimized out>, file=<optimized out>, line=<optimized out>, func=0x7f93933e6860 <__func__.116322> "meta_x11_get_stage_window",
#3 0x00007f9393e4ab1d in g_assertion_message_expr ()
#4 0x00007f939338ecd7 in meta_x11_get_stage_window (stage=<optimized out>) at ../mutter/src/backends/x11/meta-stage-x11.c:923
#5 0x00007f939339e599 in meta_backend_x11_cm_translate_device_event (x11=<optimized out>, device_event=0x55bc8bcfd6b0) at ../mutter/src/backends/x11/cm/meta-backend-x11-cm.c:381
#6 0x00007f939339f2e2 in meta_backend_x11_translate_device_event (device_event=0x55bc8bcfd6b0, x11=0x55bc89dd5220) at ../mutter/src/backends/x11/meta-backend-x11.c:179
#7 0x00007f939339f2e2 in translate_device_event (device_event=0x55bc8bcfd6b0, x11=0x55bc89dd5220) at ../mutter/src/backends/x11/meta-backend-x11.c:208
#8 0x00007f939339f2e2 in maybe_spoof_event_as_stage_event (input_event=0x55bc8bcfd6b0, x11=0x55bc89dd5220) at ../mutter/src/backends/x11/meta-backend-x11.c:284
#9 0x00007f939339f2e2 in handle_input_event (event=0x7fff62d60490, x11=0x55bc89dd5220) at ../mutter/src/backends/x11/meta-backend-x11.c:309
#10 0x00007f939339f2e2 in handle_host_xevent (event=0x7fff62d60490, backend=0x55bc89dd5220) at ../mutter/src/backends/x11/meta-backend-x11.c:413
#11 0x00007f939339f2e2 in x_event_source_dispatch (source=<optimized out>, callback=<optimized out>, user_data=<optimized out>) at ../mutter/src/backends/x11/meta-backend-x11.c:467
#12 0x00007f9393e6c39e in g_main_dispatch (context=0x55bc89dd03e0) at ../glib/glib/gmain.c:3179
#13 0x00007f9393e6c39e in g_main_context_dispatch (context=context@entry=0x55bc89dd03e0) at ../glib/glib/gmain.c:3844
#14 0x00007f9393e6e1b1 in g_main_context_iterate (context=0x55bc89dd03e0, block=block@entry=1, dispatch=dispatch@entry=1, self=<optimized out>) at ../glib/glib/gmain.c:3917
#15 0x00007f9393e6f0c3 in g_main_loop_run (loop=0x55bc8a042640) at ../glib/glib/gmain.c:4111
#16 0x00007f9393369a0c in meta_run () at ../mutter/src/core/main.c:676
#17 0x000055bc880f2426 in main (argc=<optimized out>, argv=<optimized out>) at ../gnome-shell/src/main.c:552
Related: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/issues/338
Closes: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/issues/951https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1317
(cherry picked from commit e5ea8f5483)
When we created the DMA buffer backed CoglFramebuffer, we handed it over
to CoglDmaBufHandle which took its own reference. What we failed to do
was to release our own reference to it, effectively leaking it.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1283
(cherry picked from commit c823b5ddba)
The stream will clean up the buffers, so let it do that before we
destroy them under its feet. Note that it'll only do this after the
following PipeWire commit:
commit fbaa4ddedd84afdffca16f090dcc4b0db8ccfc29
Author: Wim Taymans <wtaymans@redhat.com>
Date: Mon Jun 1 15:36:09 2020 +0200
stream: allow NULL param and 0 buffers in disconnect
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1283
(cherry picked from commit 97175f8fa1)
This cannot be made to work reliably. Some factoids:
- Internal devices may be connected via USB.
- The ACPI spec provides the _PLD (Physical location of device) hook to
determine how is an USB device connected, with an anecdotal success
rate. Internal devices may be seen as external and vice-versa, there is
also an "unknown" value that is widely used.
- There may be non-USB keyboards, the old "AT Translated Set 2 Keyboard"
interface does not change on hotplugging.
- Libinput has an internal series of quirks to classify keyboards as
internal of external, also with an "unknown" value.
These heuristics are kinda hopeless to get right by our own hand. Drop
this external keyboard detection in the hope that there will be something
more deterministic to rely on in the future (e.g. the libinput quirks
made available to us directly or indirectly).
Fixes: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/-/issues/2378
Related: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/-/issues/2353https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1277
(cherry picked from commit f8e2234ce5)
We're iterating inside the PipeWire loop when detecting PipeWire errors,
and shouldn't destroy the PipeWire objects mid-iteration. Avoid this by
first disabling the stream src (effectively stopping the recording),
then notifying about it being closed in an idle callback. The
notification eventually makes the rest of the screen cast code clean up
the objects, including the src and the associated PipeWire objects, but
will do so outside the PipeWire loop iteration.
Closes: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/issues/1251https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1251
(cherry picked from commit c8e12ead08)
In the native backend, the MetaRenderer manages the view by creating one
per CRTC, but until now the MetaStageX11 managed the view for the X11
backend. This caused some issues as it meant meta_renderer_get_views()
not returning anything, and that the view of the X11 screen not being a
MetaRendererView, while in the other backends, all views are.
Fix this by moving the view management responsibility to
MetaRendererX11Cm, and have MetaStageX11 only operate on it via
meta_renderer_x11_cm_*() API. The MetaRendererX11Cm takes care of making
sure the view is always added to the list in the renderer, and turning
X11 screen sizes into "layouts" etc.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1251
(cherry picked from commit 8a541c08fb)
"Legacy" is a misleading name, it's just how the native backend and the
X11 backend behaves differently. Instead rename it to 'add_view()' and
add the sanity check to the caller.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1251
(cherry picked from commit 73a436362a)
They all checked that the remote session service talked with the
correct peer, and some of them did check that there is an associated
screencast session.
Add a new check for the session being started (as it's state is
decoupled with screencast session availability) and move all checks
to a function that is called from all input-oriented DBus methods.
Fixes: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/issues/1254https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1258
(cherry picked from commit c8837a8de5)
It was removed in 3.34 as part of 6ed5d2e2. And we thought that was the
only thread that might exist and use X11. But the top gnome-shell crasher
in 3.36 seems to suggest otherwise.
We don't know what or where the offending thread is, but since:
1. We used XInitThreads for years already prior to 3.34; and
2. Extensions or any change to mutter/gnome-shell could conceivably use
threads to make X calls, directly or indirectly,
it's probably a good idea to reintroduce XInitThreads. The failing assertion
in libx11 is also accompanied by a strong hint:
```
fprintf(stderr, "[xcb] Most likely this is a multi-threaded client " \
"and XInitThreads has not been called\n");
```
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1877075
Closes: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/issues/1252https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1256
(cherry picked from commit 1d5f9b6917)
This changes the semantics a bit, e.g. we will never include the pointer
cursor sprite, as there is no way to know whether the caller wants to or
not.
We also change things a bit so that when we render to an offscreen paint
context, we don't emit the "paint" signal on actors, as doing so would
end up recursing in gnome-shell's screenshot and screencast code.
Closes: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/-/issues/2567https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1222
Will be used by the stage to not paint the overlays. We skip all
overlays since overlays are only ever used for pointer cursors when the
hardware cursors cannot or should not be used.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1222
These phase callbacks are not intended to be inovked when something
secondary is painting the stage, such as a screen cast stream, or
similar. Thus, only invoke the callbacks when there is a view associated
with the paint context, which will not be the case for offscreen
painting.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1222
If there is a paint context available (i.e. for the phases that are
during the actual stage paint), pass it along the callbacks, so that
the callback implementations can change their operation depending on the
paint context state.
This also means we can get the current view from the paint context,
instead of the temporarily used field in the instance struct.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1222
When resizing an X11 window with client side decorations, the shadow is
clipped by the frame bounds so that we don't need to paint the shadow
under the opaque areas covered by the window and its frame.
When the X11 client uses the EMWH synchronization mechanism (like all
gtk-3 based clients), the actual window may not be updated so that the
actual window and it frame may be behind the expected window frame
bounds, which gives the impression of de-synchronized shadows.
To avoid the issue, keep a copy of the frame bounds as a cache and only
update it when the client is not frozen so that the clipping occurs on
the actual content.
Closes: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/issues/1178https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/1214
(cherry picked from commit bd45a00fa3)
If drmModePageFlip() or custom_page_flip_func fails, process_page_flip() was
forgetting to undo the ref taken for that call. This would leak page_flip_data.
The reference counting works like this:
- when created, ref count is 1
- when calling drmModePageFlip, ref count is increased to 2
- new: if flip failed, ref count is decreased back to 1
- if calling schedule_retry_page_flip(), it takes a ref internally
- if calling mode_set_fallback(), it takes a ref internally
- all return FALSE paths have an explicit unref
- return TRUE path has an explicit unref
This issue was found by code inspection and while debugging an unrelated issue
with debug prints sprinkled around. I am not aware of any end-user visible
issues being fixed by this, as the leak is small and probably very rare.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1209
(cherry picked from commit 36111270aa)
When testing a laptop with intel and DisplayLink devices, attempting to set the
DL output as the only active output resulted in GNOME/Wayland freezing. The
main event loop was running fine, but nothing on screen would get updated once
the DL output become the only one. This patch fixes that issue.
DisplayLink USB 3 devices use an out-of-tree kernel DRM driver called EVDI.
EVDI can sometimes fail drmModePageFlip(). For me, the flip fails reliably when
hotplugging the DL dock and when changing display configuration to DL only.
Mutter has a workaround for failing flips, it just calls drmModeSetCrtc() and
that succeeds.
What does not work reliably in the fallback path is Mutter keeping track of the
pageflip. Since drmModePageFlip() failed, there will not be a pageflip event
coming and instead Mutter queues a callback in its stead. When you have more
than one output, some other output repainting will attempt to swap buffers and
calls wait_for_pending_flips() which has the side-effect of dispatching any
queued flip callbacks. With multiple outputs, you don't get stuck (unless they
all fail the exact same way at the same time?). When you have only one output,
it cannot proceed to repaint and buffer swap because the pageflip is not marked
complete yet. Nothing dispatches the flip callback, leading to the freeze.
The flip callback is intended to be an idle callback, implemented with a
GSource. It is supposed to be called as soon as execution returns to the main
event loop. The setup of the GSource is incomplete, so it will never dispatch.
Fix the GSource setup by setting its ready-time to be always in the past. That
gets it dispatched on the next cycle of the main event loop. This is now the
default behavior for all sources created by meta_kms_add_source_in_impl().
Sources that need a delay continue to do that by overriding the ready-time
explicitly.
An alternative solution could have been to implement GSource prepare and check
callbacks returning TRUE. However, since meta_kms_add_source_in_impl() is used
by flip retry code as well, and that code needs a delay through the ready-time,
I was afraid I might break the flip retry code. Hence I decided to use
ready-time instead.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1209
(cherry picked from commit 6e0cfd3e55)
According to the XSetSelectionOwner libX11 documentation:
[...] If the owner window it has specified in the request is later
destroyed, the owner of the selection automatically reverts to None,
but the last-change time is not affected.
This is indeed visible through the selection_timestamp field in
XFixesSelectionNotify events.
Use this to check whether the selection time is recent-ish (thus
likely coming from an explicit XSetSelectionOwner request) and honor
the client intent by setting a "NULL" owner. If the selection time
is too old, it's definitely an indication of the owner client being
closed, the scenario where we do want the clipboard manager to take
over.
This fixes two usecases:
- X11 LibreOffice / WPS clear the selection each time before copying
its own content. Mutter's clipboard manager would see each of those
as a hint to take over, competing with the client over selection
ownership. This would simply no longer happen
- Password managers may want to clear the selection, which would be
frustrated by our clipboard manager.
There's a slight window of opportunity for the heuristics to fail
though, if a X11 client sets the selection and closes within 50ms, we
would miss the clipboard manager taking over.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1206
(cherry picked from commit 5671f0a284)
The X11 selection source was being preserved after unsetting its
ownership. This is no leak as it would be eventually replaced by
another source, or destroyed on finalize. But it's pointless to
keep it.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1206
(cherry picked from commit 94b3c334e5)
Most visible with xwayland-on-demand, at the time of setting things up
for X11 selections, we don't forward the current state. This makes the
first started X11 app oblivious to eg. the current clipboard.
Syncing selections up at the time of initializing the X11 selection
stuff ensures that doesn't happen.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1186
(cherry picked from commit 167fd07e01)
We already have a signal callback that translates selection ownership changes to
data_device/primary .selection events. Given both will be run when a data source
is being replaced, and this event emission being deleted is kinda short sighted
in that in only knows about Wayland, rely entirely on MetaSelection::owner-changed
emission.
Fixes spurious .selection(null) events being sent when a compositor-local source
takes over the selection without the focus changing (eg. screenshot to clipboard).
Closes: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/issues/1160https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1204
(cherry picked from commit 1363246d44)
We are meant to send a .cancelled event after the drop is performed
in certain situations, but only for version>3 clients. Since this is
all version 3 business, only set the drop_performed flag for v3
clients. This drops the need to perform version checks at the time
of cancelling (which is present for other usecases in v1).
Fixes emission of wl_data_source.cancelled for v1 clients.
Closes: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/issues/1177https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1203
(cherry picked from commit d4c3870286)
For the cases where we read a fixed size from the selection (eg. imposing
limits for the clipboard manager), g_input_stream_read_bytes_async() might
not read up to this given size if the other side is spoonfeeding it content.
Cater for multiple read/write cycles here, until (maximum) transfer size is
reached.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1198
(cherry picked from commit 4bdf9a1e70)
Flushing the X11 selection output stream may happen synchronously or
implicitly, in which case there is not a task to complete. Check there
is actually a task before returning errors. We additionally set the
pipe_error flag, so future operations will fail with an error, albeit
with a more generic message.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1198
(cherry picked from commit 1909977a67)
If a write_async() comes up while we are flushing on the background,
the task will be queued, but not deemed a reason on itself to keep
flushing (and finish the task) after a property delete event.
To fix this, do not ever queue up write_async tasks (this leaves
priv->pending_task only used for flush(), so the "flush to end"
behavior in the background is consistent). We only start a
background flush if there's reasons to do it, but the tasks are
immediately finished.
All data will still be ensured to be transfered on flush/close,
this makes the caller in this situation still able to reach to it.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1198
(cherry picked from commit 655a783891)
It does not make sense to check for the stream not being closed,
this might happen multiple times during the lifetime of the stream
for a single transfer. We want to notify the INCR transfer just
once.
Check for the explicit conditions that we want, that the remaining
data is bigger than we can transfer at once, and that we are not
yet within the INCR transfer.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1198
(cherry picked from commit a4596becc4)
The stream automatically flushes after data size exceeds the
size we deem for INCR chunks, but we still try to copy it all.
Actually limit the data we copy, and leave the rest for future
INCR chunks.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1198
(cherry picked from commit 7015bb3efd)
INCR transfers are mandated to finish with a final 0-size XChangeProperty
roundtrip after the final data chunk. Actually honor this and ensure we
iterate just once more for this.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1198
(cherry picked from commit 04d429b743)
This seemed to work under the assumption that a flush() call can
only result in one INCR roundtrip. This is evidently not true, so
we should hold things off until all pending data is actually flushed.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1198
(cherry picked from commit 8a2b82897d)
If say we want 32bit data, but have 2 bytes stored, we would simply
ignore flush requests. Allow (and don't clear) the needs_flush flag
if we have less than the element size accumulated.
Instead handle this in can_flush(), so it's triggered whenever we
have enough data to fill 1 element, or if the stream is closing
(seems a broken situation, but triggered by the caller).
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1198
(cherry picked from commit 967966cdee)
XMaxRequestSize/XMaxExtendedRequestSize are documented to return
the maximum size in 4-byte units, whereas we are comparing this
to byte lenghts. We can afford 4x the data here.
Since I don't know the payload size of the XChangeProperty request,
be generous and allot 400 bytes for it, we have some to spare.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1198
(cherry picked from commit 06d67b6abf)
When closing the lid of a laptop, we reconfigure all the monitors in order
to update the CRTCs and (if enabled) the global UI scaling factor.
To do this, we try first to reuse the current configuration for the usable
monitors, but if we have only monitor enabled and this one is on the laptop
lid we just end up creating a new configuration where the primary monitor is
the laptop one (as per find_primary_monitor() in MetaMonitorConfigManager),
but ignoring the user parameters.
In case the user selected a different resolution / scaling compared to the
default one, while the laptop lid is closed we might change the monitors
layout, causing applications to rescale or reposition.
To avoid this, when creating the monitors configuration from the current
current state, in case we have only one monitor available and that one is
the laptop panel, let's just reuse this configuration.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1200
(cherry picked from commit e48516679c)
The CRTC level transform (not necessarily the hw transform) must be
taken into account when calculating the position of the CRTC in the
stage coordinate space, when placing the hw cursor, otherwise we'll
place the cursor as if the monitor was not rotated.
This wasn't a problem in the past, as with rotation, we always used the
OpenGL cursor, so the issue newer showed.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1199