We don't want to match the keysym so that e.g. an accelerator
specified as "<Super>a" works if the current keymap has a keysym other
than 'a' for that keycode which means that the accelerator would
become inaccessible in a non-latin keymap.
This is inconvenient for users that often switch keyboard layouts, or
even have different layouts in different windows, since they expect
system-level keybindings to not be affected by the current layout.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=678001
The only events we handle as XIEvents are FocusIn/Out, Enter and
Leave. Motion, ButtonPress/Release, KeyPress/Release are handled
through clutter instead.
Among other things, this means we don't need to fake motion compression
by peeking over gdk event queue...
All WM events (passive button grabs and passive keyboard grabs)
are handled through clutter now, so we must make sure we spoof
them even if they happen on frames (because that's where we
grab on)
Weirdly, clutter stopped segfaulting when we call clutter_x11 methods
and the backend is not right, but this is correct anyway, and
probably fixes some BadDrawable errors in mutter-wayland on x11,
caused by mixing windows of the outer X and windows of Xwayland.
Mouse event handling was duplicated, resulting in weird interactions
if clutter was allowed to see certain events (for example under
wayland, where it gets all events). Because now clutter sees all
X events, even when running as an x11 compositor, we can handle
everything using the clutter variants.
At the same time, rewrite a little the passive button grab code,
to make it clear what is being matched on what and why.
meta_ui_window_is_widget() returns FALSE for frame windows, so we
must filter those explicitly (by letting the event go to gtk
and from there to MetaFrames). Also, for proper gtk widgets
(window menus) we want to let gtk see all events, including
keyboard, otherwise we break keynav in the window menu.
This means that having a window menu open disables keybindings
(because the event doesn't run through clutter)
We must spoof events to clutter even if they are associated
with a MetaWindow, because keyboard events are always associated
with one (the focus window), and we must process keybindings
for window togheter with the global ones if they include Super,
because we're not going to see them again.
... and individually. It turns out that updating the opaque region
was causing the shape region to be updated, which was causing a new
shape mask to be generated and uploaded to the GPU. Considering
GTK+ regenerates the opaque region on pretty much any focus change,
this is not good.
For decorated windows, we don't want to apply any input
shape, because the frame is always rectangular and eats
all the input.
The real check is in meta-window-actor, where we consider
if we need to apply the bounding shape and the input shape
(or the intersection of the two) to the surface-actor,
but as an optimization we avoid querying the server in
meta-window.
Additionally, for undecorated windows, the "has input shape"
check is wrong if the window has a bounding shape but not an
input shape.
... and individually. It turns out that updating the opaque region
was causing the shape region to be updated, which was causing a new
shape mask to be generated and uploaded to the GPU. Considering
GTK+ regenerates the opaque region on pretty much any focus change,
this is not good.
The handler pointer is dangling in MetaKeyBinding until
rebuild_key_binding_table() is run, so we can't dereference it.
Because we only need the flags at ungrab time, store a copy
in the MetaKeyBinding structure.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=724402
The handler pointer is dangling in MetaKeyBinding until
rebuild_key_binding_table() is run, so we can't dereference it.
Because we only need the flags at ungrab time, store a copy
in the MetaKeyBinding structure.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=724402
At some point meta_window_actor_cull_out stopped calling
meta_cullable_cull_out_children which caused the unobscured region
to never be set for the stex.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=725216
For decorated windows, we don't want to apply any input
shape, because the frame is always rectangular and eats
all the input.
The real check is in meta-window-actor, where we consider
if we need to apply the bounding shape and the input shape
(or the intersection of the two) to the surface-actor,
but as an optimization we avoid querying the server in
meta-window.
Additionally, for undecorated windows, the "has input shape"
check is wrong if the window has a bounding shape but not an
input shape.
We need a MetaWaylandSurface to build a MetaSurfaceActor, but
we don't have one until we get the set_window_xid() call from
XWayland. On the other hand, plugins expect to see the window
actor right from when the window is created, so we need this
empty state.
Based on a patch by Jasper St. Pierre.
Turns out we only ever need to freeze/thaw whole windows, not
surfaces or subsurfaces.
This will allow removing the surface actor without losing
the count.
This time, to make way for MetaSurfaceActorEmpty. This also fixes
destroy effects as a side effect. It still has issues if we try
to re-assign an actor that's already toplevel (e.g. somebody
re-popping up a menu that's already being destroyed), but this
will be fixed soon.
The idea here is that MetaWindowActor will do the unparenting of
the surface actor when it itself is destroyed. To prevent bad issues
with picking, we only make the surface actor reactive when it's
toplevel.
It triggers too often, making G_DEBUG=fatal-warnings quite useless.
Owen is going to rewrite this code sometime in the near future, so
I'm just gonna kill this warning for now.
If the last reference of a MetaIdleMonitor is held by the caller, it may
happen that the last reference is lost when calling the GDestroyNotify,
if this happens when the watched DBus name vanishes, the object (and the
watches hashtable) are destroyed while manipulating the watches hashtable,
so bad things may happen then.
Fix this by wrapping the operation by a ref/unref pair, so the object would
be destroyed after operating on the hashtable.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=724969
gnome-shell has some complex tracking to set the X input focus
correctly, assuming various things about how the stage is set up in X11.
For instance, it assumes that all actors that get key focus are
gnome-shell Chrome actors that will get events through the stage, so
when one of them is focused, it will try to set the focus back to the
stage.
In Wayland, windows are considered chrome actors that will get key
events through the stage, so this only has the result of unfocusing any
windows that have just received key focus.
We should probably move this input focus moving to mutter instead of
gnome-shell so we can better use mutter's internal state and heuristics.