This makes sure that xdg-output.logical_size and
xdg-output.logical_position are only sent when they actually changed.
There should be no behavior change in wl_output_transform_from_transform
but it now uses the same technique of tracking the protocol state and
comparing it to the current state to compute which properties have
changed.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/3622>
X11 server side focus changes, such as when a focus change was requested
by mutter for a globally active window, did not go through
meta_display_set_input_focus(), which is responsible for emitting the
`focus-window` signal. Since this signal is what triggers the display
server specific code to handle focus changes, this was leading to a
problem on Wayland where the focus remained on the last active Wayland
window when the focus got changed to a globally active XWayland window.
This commit now changes handling X11 server side focus changes to also
go through the code path that emits the signal while making sure to not
trigger another focus change and keeping the same serials as the
previous code to not interfere with future focus changes.
Closes: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/issues/3328
Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/3651>
MetaSelectionSourceMemory currently uses GBytes for its underlying data.
This can cause memory overhead when large items, such as HD images, are
stored in the clipboard. This commit changes the underlying data
structure to a MetaAnonymousFile object, which writes to memfd instead
of heap. When reading, MetaSelectionSourceMemory will create a
Gio.UnixInputStream from the file descriptor generated by
MetaAnonymousFile. We subclass the UnixInputStream as
MetaUnixInputStream, to override the stream's close_fn function so
that it invokes meta_anonymous_file_close_fd when the stream terminates.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/3551>
Which got introduced in wl_compositor version 6.
Note that if the surface is visible on multiple monitors with different
transforms, we pick the transform of the monitor which we choose for the
scale as well. This doesn't really matter at the moment, as the
transform is only really relevant for direct-scanout - which we
currently only support for fullscreen clients.
Once we support direct-scanout for partially visible clients we'll
likely want to introduce a more sophisticated algorithm.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/3580>
Some clients - notably the Gstreamer vapostproc element when using Intel
GPUs - only support BGRA, not BGRx. We already assume that we can
support this format for window screen casts, and even in case of failure
we now have a re-negotiation fallback in place. Thus it's pretty safe to
support it for all screen cast types.
The possible duplication in case of window screen casts doesn't seem to
be a problem for either Pipewire or existing clients like OBS.
Note that the implementation lays the foundation to make it easy to add
more formats in the future.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/3617>
Currently, ClutterFrameClock uses g_source_set_ready_time() to determine
the usec timing of the next frame. That translates into a poll() with a
millisecond timeout if no trigger occurs to break the poll() out early.
To avoid spinning the CPU, GLib always rounds *up* to the next millisecond
value unless a timeout of 0 was provided by a GSource.
This means that timeouts for the ClutterFrameClock can easily skew beyond
their expected time as the precision is too coarse.
This applies the same concept as GNOME/glib!3949 but just for the
ClutterFrameClock. That may be more ideal than adding a timerfd for every
GMainContext, but we'll see if that lands upstream. I wanted to provide
this here because it could easily be cherry-picked in the mean time if
this is found to be useful.
From a timer stability perspective, this improves things from erratically
jumping between 100s and 1000s off of the expected awake time to single
or low double digits.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/3636>
The POINTER_EMULATED flag was a convenience to filter either
side of smooth/discrete events that we should ignore based on
the source.
This distinction was challenged, first by v120 mice that use
Clutter smooth events to deliver semi-discrete changes, second
by commit e0c4b2b241 ("backends/native: Mark the emulated smooth
scroll event as such") which made the smooth events be flagged
as emulated, and the discrete whole-step events marked as
real.
This distinction feels convenient for the time being, since
upper layers might be confused by real smooth scroll events
without finish flags. Adapt to this change at MetaWaylandPointer
so that we drop the POINTER_EMULATED check, and the events are
perhaps filtered based on their source and the preferred
wl_seat version of the client that we are talking to.
This handles the whole grid of combinations:
- wheel sources with wl_seat >=8 result in wl_pointer.axis_value120
from "emulated" smooth scroll events, with value120 information.
- wheel sources with wl_seat < 8 result in wl_pointer.axis_discrete
from "real" discrete scroll events.
- finger/continuous sources prefer smooth events. Previously, always
non-emulated for those.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/3642>
The wl_pointer.axis_discrete axis (applicable to wl_seat <= v8) is
meant to be sent together with wl_pointer.axis events in the same
frame. And the wl_pointer.axis_value120 event replaces it in
wl_seat >= v9, but has the same relation with the other information
available in a frame.
This emission should not be conditional to anything, so drop the
various checks leading to maybe sending wl_pointer.axis or not.
This fixes emission of wl_pointer.axis in conjunction with discrete
events, for some combinations of versions and (non)value120 mice.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/3642>
Unveiled by commit e0c4b2b241 ("backends/native: Mark the emulated smooth
scroll event as such"). The sudden "lack" of smooth scroll events (Used by
Clutter to forward v120 events) made it evident we silently ignore Clutter
discrete events, as we don't send wl_pointer.axis_value120 for these.
Fix this by assigning a value120 value to discrete scroll events. This
makes wl_pointer.axis_value120 events actually sent on non-v120 mice.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/3642>
The default value will change from `false` to `true` in future Meson
releases, so let’s be explicit.
We don’t want to check the exit status of the program in this case, as
we parse the `--help` output instead.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@gnome.org>
Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/3640>
`find_program().path()` was deprecated in Meson 0.55, but we depend on
Meson 0.60.
This helps fix the build with `--fatal-meson-warnings`.
Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@gnome.org>
Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/3640>
meta_window_handle_ungrabbed_event() triggers the show of the window menu in
gnome-shell via meta_window_show_menu() on hold of Meta + right mouse button
click.
Since meta_display_handle_event() was refactored lately and now forwards a
lot more events to Clutter (including the one triggering the window menu),
gnome-shell now sees this event after the menu has opened, figures that the
source-actor is outside of the menu, and immediately closes the menu again.
This is the correct behavior from the PopupMenuManager on the gnome-shell
side, it is the responsibility of the event handler that opens the menu (aka
meta_window_handle_ungrabbed_event()) to return CLUTTER_EVENT_STOP and stop
event propagation.
So fix this issue by adding a return value to
meta_window_handle_ungrabbed_event() and stopping event propagation in case
the event opened the window menu.
While at it, also return CLUTTER_EVENT_STOP for events triggering window
drags, so we can drop the extra check for that in
meta_display_handle_event().
Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/3623>
For each libinput scroll event we generate two clutter events
(continuous and discrete), one of them marked as emulated. libei
explicitly specifies that emulation of scrolling must be done in the
client (if desired) so drop the emulated one.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/3637>
`meta_window_set_user_time()` will not update the window's
user time if it timestamp in the argument is before the
currently saved timestamp. However, when trying to work around
problematic timestamps, this is exactly what needs to be done.
So force the update to happen by setting the "is user time set?"
flag to false.
Fixes: 8f3da9f68a ("Use meta_window_set_user_time for setting user time consistently")
Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/3027>
priv->current_drag is the property that
meta_compositor_get_current_window_drag() and therefore also
meta_display_is_grabbed() bases its check on. We use
meta_display_is_grabbed() to select which cursor to use (window cursor
vs root cursor) when updating the cursor in MetaCursorTracker.
Since meta_window_drag_begin() sets a new cursor, and therefore triggers the
cursor tracker to update the current visible cursor, we should set
priv->current_drag before the call to meta_window_drag_begin(). This makes
sure the cursor tracker sees that there's a window drag and changes the
cursor right away when the window drag begins (instead of doing so on
subsequent pointer events).
Fixes: 525ed1166c ("wayland/pointer: Unset current surface during window drags")
Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/3630>