latin1_string_from_results and utf8_string_from_results use g_strndup,
so the returned string should be freed with g_free, rather then with
free or XFree. This fixes all free-s of buffers returned by these 2
functions to properly use g_free.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/786
Use g_new0 instead of calloc for motif_hints_from_results and adjust
its callers to use g_free.
Note that in the process_request_frame_extents function this replaces
the wrong original mismatch of calloc + XFree with a matching g_malloc +
g_free pair.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/786
The meta_display_update_focus_window() call has indirect dependencies
on the X11 focus window, in order to determine the correct focus window
on the Wayland side (i.e. may turn out NULL with certain X windows).
In order to have the right x11_display->focus_xwindow there, we should
perform first the focus update on the X11 display.
Fixes focusing of Java applications, as those don't seem to go through
_NET_ACTIVE_WINDOW.
Closes: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/issues/819
Instead of open coding the X11 focus management in display.c, expose
it as a single function with similar arguments to its MetaDisplay
counterpart. This just means less X11 specifics in display.c.
Closes: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/issues/751
MetaDisplay and MetaX11Display focus windows are slightly decoupled,
we cannot rely here on the MetaDisplay focus to be updated yet. We
however know the X Window that got focused, so lookup the corresponding
MetaWindow (and client X window) from it.
Closes: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/issues/751
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
If an application provides its window icon via wmhints, then mutter
loads the pixmap specified by the application into a cairo xlib surface. When
creating the surface it specifies the visual, indirectly, via an XRender
picture format.
This is suboptimal, since XRender picture formats don't have a way to specify
16bpp depth, which an application may be using.
In particular, applications are likely to use 16bpp depth pixmaps for their
icons, if the video card offers a 16bpp framebuffer/root window.
This commit drops the XRender middleman, and just tells cairo a visual to use
directly.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/715
We indirectly were relying on the MetaX11Stack for this. We strictly
need the _NET_CLIENT_LIST* property updates there, so move our own
internal synchronization to common code.
Fixes stacking changes of windows while there's no MetaX11Display.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/730
The end goal is to have all clutter backend code in src/backends. Input
is the larger chunk of it, which is now part of our specific
MutterClutterBackendX11, this extends to device manager, input devices,
tools and keymap.
This was supposed to be nice and incremental, but there's no sane way
to cut this through. As a result of the refactor, a number of private
Clutter functions are now exported for external backends to be possible.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/672
Introduce MetaCompositorX11, dealing with being a X11 compositor, and
MetaCompositorServer, being a compositor while also being the display
server itself, e.g. a Wayland display server.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/727
Unmanaging the windows may trigger stack operations that we later try
to synchronize despite being in dispose() stage. This may trigger
MetaStackTracker warnings when trying to apply those operations.
Switching destruction order (First dispose the X11 stack representation,
then unmanage windows) won't trigger further stack changes on X11 windows
after having signaled MetaDisplay::x11-display-closing.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/709
In the case mutter is a x11 compositor, it doesn't matter much
since the stack tracker will go away soon. In the case this is a
wayland compositor with mandatory Xwayland, it matters even less
since the session would be shutting down in those paths.
But if this a wayland compositor that can start Xwayland on demand,
this is even harmful, as the MetaStackTracker should be cleared of
x11 windows at this moment, and we actually did right before dispose
on ::x11-display-closing.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/709
The default configuration of libinput-gestures utility invokes wmctrl to
switch between desktops. It uses wmctrl because this works on both Xorg
and Wayland (via XWayland). Unfortunately, this generates the following
warning message every time, in both Xorg and Wayland desktops:
"Received a NET_CURRENT_DESKTOP message from a broken (outdated) client
who sent a 0 timestamp"
The desktop switch still works fine. The tiny code change here removes
this specific warning because, as the prefacing code comment originally
said and still says, older clients can validly pass a 0 time value so
why complain about that?
I also refactored the "if (workspace)" code slightly to avoid the double
test of the workspace value.
This is submitted for MR
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/671.
Starting with commit 2db94e2e we try to focus a fallback default focus window
if no take-focus window candidate gets the input focus when we request it and
we limit the focus candidates to the current window's workspace.
However, if the window is unmanaging, the workspace might be unset, and we could
end up in deferencing a NULL pointer causing a crash.
So, in case the window's workspace is unset, just use the currently active
workspace for the display.
Closes https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/issues/687https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/688
As per commit f71151a5 we focus an input window if no take-focus-window accepts
it. This might lead to an infinite loop if there are various focusable but
non-input windows in the stack.
When the current focus window is unmanaging and we're trying to focus a
WM_TAKE_FOCUS window, we intent to give the focus to the first focusable input
window in the stack.
However, if an application (such as the Java ones) only uses non-input
WM_TAKE_FOCUS windows, are not requesting these ones to get the focus. This
might lead to a state where no window is focused, or a wrong one is.
So, instead of only focus the first eventually input window available, try to
request to all the take-focus windows that are in the stack between the
destroyed one and the first input one to acquire the input focus.
Use a queue to keep track of those windows, that is passed around stealing
ownership, while we protect for unmanaged queued windows.
Also, reduce the default timeout value, as the previous one might lead to an
excessive long wait.
Added metatests verifying these situations.
Closes: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/issues/660https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/669
As per commit f71151a5 we were ignoring WM_TAKE_FOCUS-only windows as focus
targets, however this might end-up in an infinite loop if there are multiple
non-input windows stacked.
So, accept any focusable window as fallback focus target even if it's a
take-focus one (that might not reply to the request).
Added a stacking test to verify this.
Closes: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/issues/660https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/669
When looking for the best fallback focus window, we ignore it if it is in the
unmanaging state, but meta_stack_get_default_focus_window() does this is check
for us already.
So, ignore the redundant test.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/669
We need to set XdndAware and XdndProxy on the stage window if running
a X11 compositor, this is not necessary on wayland.
Takes over gnome-shell code doing this initialization.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/667
When requesting to a take-focus window to acquire the input, the client may or
may not respond with a SetInputFocus (this doesn't happen for no-input gtk
windows in fact [to be fixed there too]), in such case we were unsetting the
focus while waiting the reply.
In case the client won't respond, we wait for a small delay (set to 250 ms) for
the take-focus window to grab the input focus before setting it to the default
window.
Added a test for this behavior and for the case in which a window takes the
focus meanwhile we're waiting to focus the default window.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/307
On FreeBSD, gethostname is guarded by '__POSIX_VISIBLE >= 200112', which
requires either '_POSIX_C_SOURCE >= 200112' or '_XOPEN_SOURCE >= 600'.
Defining _XOPEN_SOURCE to 500 does not break the build because of
implicit declaration, but it defeats the purpose of defining the macro.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/638
Starting from commit 7713006f5, during X11 disposition we also unmanage the
windows using the xids hash table values list.
However, this is also populated by the X11 Meta barrier implementation and then
contains both Windows and Barriers.
So when going through the values list, check whether we're handling a window or
a barrier and based on that, unmanage or destroy it.
Fixes https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/issues/624https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/605
Since commit 956ab4bd made libcanberra mandatory, we never use
the system bell for handling the `audible-bell` setting. So
instead of reacting to settings changes with the exact same call
to XkbChangeEnabledControls(), just call it once when initializing.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/598
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
This object takes care of the X11 representation of the window stack,
namely the _NET_CLIENT_LIST and _NET_CLIENT_LIST_STACKING root window
properties.
This code has been lifted from src/core/stack.c into src/x11 as it's
dependent on the X11 display availability. This also leaves MetaStack
squeaky clean of x11 specifics.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/420
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
This shouldn't happen frequently, but is just a sign that the source is
being replaced by something else. Just keep the warning for other possible
error situations.
Also, plug the potential GError leak.
Closes: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/issues/598
This code takes care of both setting up X11 selection sources whenever
X11 clients claim selection ownership, and claiming selection ownership
on a mutter X11 window whenever other selection sources claim ownership.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/320
This object represents the selection ownership from an X11 client. The
list of supported targets is queried upfront, so its initialization is
asynchronous. Requests to read contents from the selection will hand
a MetaX11SelectionInputStream.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/320
Calculations were being done at places accounting on usec precision,
however those are still treated as having msec precision at places. Let's
consolidate for the latter since it requires less changes across the board
and usec precision doesn't buy us anything here.
Closes: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/issues/541
Splitting out the X11 display initialization from display_open() broke
restoring the previously active workspace in two ways:
- when dynamic workspaces are used, the old workspaces haven't
been restored yet, so we stay on the first workspace
- when static workspaces are used, the code tries to access
the compositor that hasn't been initialized yet, resulting
in a segfault
Fix both those issues by splitting out restoring of the active workspace.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/issues/479
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
Make meson link libmutter using -fvisibility=hidden, and introduce META_EXPORT
and META_EXPORT_TEST defines to mark a symbols as visible.
The TEST version is meant to be used to flag symbols that are only used
internally by mutter tests, but that should not be considered public API.
This allows us to be more precise in selecting what is exported and what is
not, without the need of a version-script file that would be more complicated
to maintain.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/395
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
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.
While leaving the runtime checks in place, requiring xrandr 1.5 at build
time allows us to remove some seemingly unnecessary conditional
inclusion of functionality.
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.
Closing a GdkDisplay during an event handler is not currently supported by Gdk
and it will result in a crash when doing e.g. 'mutter --replace'. Using an idle
function will close it safely in a subsequent main loop iteration.
Fixes: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/issues/595
Commit 840378ae68 changed the code to use XmbTextPropertyToTextList()
instead of gdk_text_property_to_utf8_list_for_display(), but didn't
take into account that the replacement returns text in the current
locale's encoding, while any callers (rightfully) expect UTF8.
Fix this by converting the text if necessary.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/227
The WM_NAME property is of type TEXT_PROPERTY, which is supposed to be
returned as UTF-8. Commit 840378ae68 broke that assumption, resulting
in crashes with non-UTF8 locales; however the "fix" of converting from
LATIN1 to UTF8 is wrong as well, as the conversion will spit out garbage
when the input encoding isn't actually LATIN1.
Now that the original issue in text_property_to_utf8() has been fixed,
we can simply revert the relevant bits of commit d62491f46e.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/227
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
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
XcursorLibraryLoadCursor can return 'None' if the current cursor theme
is missing the requested icon. If XFreeCursor is then called on this
cursor, it generates a BadCursor error causing gnome-shell to crash.
Fixes https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/issues/254
Force update the cursor renderer after theme or size changes; otherwise
we'll be stuck with the old theme and/or size until something else
triggers resetting of the cursor.
If we wait with opening the X11 window decoration GDK connection, we
might end up with a terminated X11 server before we finish
initializing, depending on the things happening after spawning Xwayland
and before opening the MetaX11Dispaly. In gnome-shell, this involves
e.g. creating a couple of temporary X11 connections, and on disconnect,
if they happen to be the last client, the X server will terminate
itself.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=759538
Under Xorg the cursor size preference was pre-scaled originating from
gtk, while with Wayland it came directly from GSettings remaining
unscaled. Under Xwayland this caused the X11 display code to set the
wrong size with HiDPI configurations, which was often later overridden
by the equivalent code in gtk, but not always.
Fix this by always having the cursor size preference unscaled, scaling
the size correctly where it's used, depending on how it's used.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=759538
- 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
mutter would discard the shape region set by the client if its matches
the entire client area in meta_window_x11_update_shape_region().
However, if the window is later resized (maximized or other), the
compositor will fail to update the shape region properly for undecorated
windows because the shape region was discarded, which causes black areas
to appear in place of the updated areas.
If the client window is undecorated, keep the shape region even if when
it matches the client area.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/issues/27Closes: #27
When a window's workspace is not NULL, on_all_workspace should be FALSE.
Similarly, when on_all_workspace is TRUE, the window workspace should be
NULL.
This is an assumption in multiple places in the code, including when
setting the workspace state, the window is either added or removed from
all workspaces only if the window's workspace is NULL.
This rule is initially enforced at creation in _meta_window_shared_new()
when a initial workspace is set. However, when the initial workspace is
set from the session info, the initial workspace is not marked as “set”
which leads to an assertion failure when unmanaging windows, because the
window is not removed from all the workspaces.
When applying the session info to a window, mark the workspace as “set”.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/issues/4Closes: #4
Having “on_all_workspaces_requested” FALSE on a window does not imply a
workspace is set.
If the X11 window is placed on a secondary monitor while workspaces
applies on primary monitor only (“workspaces-only-on-primary” set) then
“on_all_workspaces_requested” is FALSE while “on_all_workspaces“ is TRUE
and the associated workspace is NULL, leading to a crash when saving the
gnome-shell/mutter session.
So if no workspace is set, use the “initial_workspace” instead to avoid
a NULL pointer dereference.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=792818
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
Add a new client message "_XWAYLAND_MAY_GRAB_KEYBOARD" that X11 clients
can use to tell mutter this is a well behaving X11 client so it may
grant the keyboard grabs when requested.
An X11 client wishing to be granted Xwayland grabs by gnome-shell/mutter
must send a ClientMessage to the root window with:
- message_type set to "_XWAYLAND_MAY_GRAB_KEYBOARD"
- window set to the xid of the window on which the grab is to be issued
- data.l[0] to a non-zero value
Note: Sending this client message when running a plain native X11
environment would have no effect.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=783342
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
To keep feature parity with the Wayland backend, and
to improve the overall tiling experience with GTK apps,
add the _GTK_EDGE_CONSTRAINTS X11 atom and update it
when necessary.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=751857
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
Commits 6dbec6f8, 734402e1 and f041b35b introduced memory leaks by
switching to returning copies instead of the original buffers but
forgetting to free those original buffers.
Some error cases were also not freeing the ->prop buffer as they
should.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=642652
The method used for getting the current logical monitor (the monitor
where the pointer cursor is currently at) depends on the backend type,
so move that logic to the corresponding backends.
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
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
In that case, the MetaWindow is created, but it should also be unminimized
to satisfy the MapRequest triggered by the client, otherwise these would
stay minimized until they're shown explicitly by the user.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=774333
Some applications like Wine may choose to juggle the same user time
window across different toplevels, in that case we receive warnings
when trying to register the window a second time, leading to wrong
accounting.
If the window was already used as the user time window for another
toplevel, unset it from the previous MetaWindow owner, and unregister
so the registration with the new MetaWindow is successful.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=774330
In order to kill a window, on both X11 and wayland we first try to
kill(3) the corresponding process, so we can add the newly added
get_client_pid() method to share that code.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=772613
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
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.
gjs throws exceptions on non UTF-8 strings which, in some cases, crash
gnome-shell. ICCCM string properties are defined to be Latin-1 encoded
so we can try to convert them to avoid it.
Note that _NET_WM_NAME is defined to be UTF-8 and we already validate
it in utf8_string_from_results() .
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=752788
To support invoking the system bell on Wayland we shouldn't have paths
that fallback to X11. Let the X11 caller deal with the absence of
libcanberra, and change API to not take any X events.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=763284
This is kind of in a middle ground at the moment. Even though it
handles sequences not coming from libsn, they're added nowhere at
the moment, we'll rely on the app launch context being in the x11
side at the moment.
Also, even though we do create internal sequence objects, we keep
exposing SnStartupSequences to make gnome-shell happy, we could
consider making this object "public" (and the sequence objects with
it), things stay private at the moment.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=762268
Some of the mutter code using these properties expects them to be
null-terminated whereas xcb does not use null-terminated strings:
http://xcb.freedesktop.org/XcbRationale/
This was in some cases resulting in the WM_CLASS property containing
garbage data which broke application matching, caused the hot-corner and
window-switcher to stop working, or was exposed as text in the UI.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=759658
Some applications, like Chromium, explicitly set their bounding region
to the client area when full-screen. Detect this case, and allow us to
fullscreen when this happens.
When managing a non-OR window we're required by the ICCCM to behave as
if we received a ConfigureRequest which means that we must generate a
synthetic ConfigureNotify even if the window isn't moved or resized
from its current (initial) geometry.
During MetaWindow's x11/wayland split a slight behavior change for x11
windows crept in. Before the code split, MetaWindow->rect was
initialized with the X window's geometry, but now we're not
initializing MetaWindowX11Private->client_rect which causes the checks
for whether it's necessary to move/resize the window in
meta_window_x11_move_resize_internal() to tell us that we do need to
move/resize which means we do an XConfigureWindow() call and don't
send the sythetic ConfigureNotify. But since the X window isn't really
moving, the XConfigureWindow() call doesn't cause the X server to
generate a ConfigureNotify which breaks some clients such as Java's
AWT.
We can fix this by setting MetaWindowX11Privatew->client_rect for both
OR and non-OR windows. We can set buffer_rect for non-OR windows as
well to simplify the code since it will be assigned the correct value
in meta_window_x11_move_resize_internal() .
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=759492
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
If a client only ever sets the hint on window creation we'd never pick
the value. Also, include override redirect windows since the hint is
relevant to them too.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=758544
In a HiDPI environment, all gtk+ apps will report a 2 x 2 size
increment to avoid odd size. But that does not mean they are
resizing in cells like terminals, so they resize popup should
not be shown.
Ideally, we should ignore <= scale x scale increments, but in
practice scale is 1 or 2, and even in a lo-dpi setting a 2 x 2
increment makes little sense so let's keep the patch simple.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=746420
Both Window and XSyncCounter are XIDs which on 64 bit X clients are 8
bytes wide. But the values on the wire are 32 bit so, for these types,
we always copy 4 bytes into results->prop. As such copying them out
with a cast such as *(Window *) means that we are actually reading 8
bytes which depending on whether the higher addressed 4 bytes are zero
means that sometimes this works while others it gives us a bogus
value.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=756074
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
Since we're using xcb now, not Xlib, it doesn't have the stupid silly
thing where it copies all 32-bit data to 64-bit data to match the
long-y-ness of it.
It seems the largest possible value is to be passed, so actually pass
that instead. Note that even though the name of the xcb_get_property
parameter is called 'long_length' its actually a uint32_t.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=751136
This piece of code hooks in both wl_data_device and the relevant X
selection events, an X11 Window is set up so it can act as the clipboard
owner when any wayland client owns the selection, reacting to
SelectionRequest events, and returning the data from the wayland client
FD to any X11 requestor through X properties.
In the opposite direction, SelectionNotify messages are received,
which results in the property contents being converted then written
into the wayland requestor's FD.
This code also takes care of the handling incremental transfers through
the INCR property type, reading/writing data chunk by chunk.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=738312
Since commit 6e06648f7, we start out with the invisible frame parts
only, and then add the unconstrained rect's height (which consists of
the visible parts of both frame and client window) *unless* the window
is shaded. While we indeed don't want to add the client height in that
case, we need to explicitly include the visible frame parts now.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=746145
The timer to blacklist the window from frame sync is set at the time of
issuing the sync request, but not removed until the client replies to
the most recent wait serial.
This means that if the client is slowly catching up, the timeout would
fire up regardless of the client slowly updating the alarm to older
values.
Fix this by ensuring the timeout is reset everytime the sync request
counter is updated, to acknowledge the client is not irresponsive,
just slow.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=740424
In order to switch to the correct surface actor scale given the monitor
the surface is on, without relying on the client committing a new state
given some other side effect, sync the surface actor state when the main
monitor associated with the corresponding window changed.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=744933
Kerbel Space Program, and perhaps some other SDL-based programs, use
a really dumb way of specifying icons, which is totally
non-standards-compliant.
The ICCCM specifies that the icon_pixmap field of WM_HINTS should be a
1-bit-deep Pixmap, but we've seen applications set it to a pixmap of the
root depth as well, so we support that.
Kerbel Space Program seems to use it with a 32-bit depth Pixmap,
signifying ARGB32 (which it is), along with a 1-bit icon_mask, which
crashes us.
Keep in mind that Pixmaps, by definition, have no Visual attached, so
we simply have to make a guess at the correct visual based on the
depth. Do that by assuming that a depth-32 visual always means ARGB32,
which is a pretty safe bet.
Windows that set empty input shapes get n_rects of 0 when querying them
later, which makes sense, but the code that interpreted the result
translated it into a NULL input shape, which meant it was the same as
the bounding region. As such, an empty input shape would actually get
interpreted as a full input shape!
We, ourselves, set an empty input shape on tray icon windows in
gnome-shell since we would handle the picking ourselves. This meant that
we'd actually get the MetaSurfaceActorX11 when hovering over the tray
icon, instead of the ShellGTKEmbed that we capture events on and react
to.
This fixes weird tray icon behavior in gnome-shell.
We clip the input region to the client rect, so the client rect should
be up to date before we fetch the input region.
This fixes popup windows not working in GTK+2 under Wayland.
We should also update the shape / input regions when the window is
reconfigured for a complete fix, so that making an O-R window bigger
doesn't confuse mutter, but let's leave that to a future commit.
The coordinates in ConfigureNotify *should* be the coordinates of the
client window; using the coordinates of the frame window compensated for
a problem with the interpretation of StaticGravity for some clients but
broke other clients.
This reverts commit f4f70afe31.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=736719
This prevents issues from happening when processing Enter/Leave events
while in another kind of grab op like a Wayland popup or resizing a
window.
This can't ever really happen except outside of a race condition,
with the X server, since we won't ever pass input events to the
X server in any of these cases, but it can't hurt to be more correct
about what the intended operation is.
GTK+ focuses its own windows with RevertToParent, which means that when
a GTK+ CSD window is destroyed, the X server will set the focus back to
the root window. The event stream that we is an UnmapNotify followed by
a FocusOut event. Our own UnmapNotify-handling code unmanages the window
and forcibly changes the focus to the next default window in the stack.
Since UnmapNotify events don't come with timestamps, we query for one,
and set the window focus using that.
But there's *still* a FocusOut event in the stack, with an older
timestamp and serial than our own focusing. We see this, throw it out
since it's older than the most recent focus, but then our own code that
notices the root has been focused kicks in and tries to focus the
default window... using a timestamp older than our most recent focusing.
meta_display_sanity_check_timestamps notices this, and (rightly so)
puts a warning in our face, telling something is awry.
Only let our workarounds kick in when the event is new enough, otherwise
our code will get confused over old events.
This stops the:
Window manager warning: last_focus_time (367917173) is greater than comparison timestamp (367917170). This most likely represents a buggy client sending inaccurate timestamps in messages such as _NET_ACTIVE_WINDOW. Trying to work around...
warning spam when closing a CSD window.
The merge of the commit af46ef3b 'meta_window_new: clean up error handling'
to the wayland branch accidentally added an extra call to meta_error_trap_push(),
meaning that we leaked one level of error traps for each new window.
Fixes warning:
Gdk-WARNING **: XSetErrorHandler() called with a GDK error trap pushed.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=736589
When the screen resizes, we get a configure event for the composite overlay
window - don't pass that to MetaStackTracker, since the COW isn't in the
stack.
Fixes warning:
mutter-WARNING **: STACK_OP_RAISE_ABOVE: window 0x65 not in stack
Add a private hook for the test framework to get XSyncAlarmEvent events -
this will be used to implement XSyncCounter based synchronization
so that the test framework can deterministically wait until Mutter
has seen actions performed by an X11 client.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=736505
Before, we were using the root window coordinates of the client window,
rather than the toplevel frame window. This caused various Java programs
and programs like VirtualBox and WINE to get confused about where their
window actually is, and make bad ConfigureRequests when trying to
position their windows in the future.
Remove the mass of code here by just using window->rect.
The existing workspace management code is quite hairy, with plenty of
logic inline in all of window.c, workspace.c, and screen.c, making it
hard to understand or make changes to, since you might forget to change
several of the other places the code was around.
Rewrite the internal workspace management logic so that it's
centralized and all in window.c. Document the invariants we need to
maintain, and ensure that these invariants are properly kept, with
asserts in various places.
Extensive testing on gnome-shell did not bring up any issues, and this
is a considerable cleanup.
Since commit 467465c99c we use meta_stage even on x11 which sets
clutter_stage_set_user_resizable to FALSE.
This messes things up because we ought to ignore the properties on the window
but we apperently didn't.
There is no reason why we'd want to manage the stage window.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=734852
Since commit a7b7213017, we rely on the standard property
system to initialize the window type (and likewise for the window
role since commit 031154a400). However as property hooks are
never run for properties that are not set, we end up not initializing
the window type correctly for windows with no _NET_WM_WINDOW_TYPE
property (which includes virtually all OR windows, causing them to
show up in pagers and the Shell overview and resulting in frequent
crashes due to breaking reasonable assumptions all over the place).
Introduce a new FORCE_INIT flag to allow forcing hooks to run
even when the corresponding property is unset, and use it for
both _NET_WM_WINDOW_TYPE and _NET_WM_WINDOW_ROLE.
This is so we won't poke into the MetaDisplay, which is invalid memory,
and crash. This can sometimes work right now because GSlice might not
deallocate the object immediately, but it's still not a fun thing to do.
Properties like _NET_WM_DESKTOP and _NET_WM_STATE are supposed to be
ignored after the initial map of the window, so ignore any
PropertyNotifies for these.
GTK+ likes to set these, well, _NET_WM_OPAQUE_REGION in particular, to
the same value. Save some expensive and processing when this happens. We
should probably make GTK+ smarter.
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
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.