In order to support multiple pointers for the same client, we're
going to need to kill it.
This will cause crashes for now, but will be fixed by the next
commit.
In particular we need to know about all key events to keep the xkb
state reliable even if the event is then consumed by a global shortcut
or grab and never reaches any wayland client.
We also need to keep track of all pressed keys at all times so that we
can send an updated set or pressed keys to the focused client when a
grab ends.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=722847
Any given clutter event carries the modifier state as it was before it
occured but, for the wayland modifiers event, we want the state
including the current event.
To fix this, we'll keep our xkb_state instance around instead of the
serialized mods.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=722847
This is not needed since the instance is being destroyed and in fact
actively harmful when code called from other handlers disconnects us
for other reasons. In that case we might crash because the
disconnection doesn't prevent other handlers from running in the
current signal emission and thus we try to remove ourselves from an
empty list.
If the client destroys the pointer resource, we shouldn't unfocus the
surface, and we should regrab it when the client gets the pointer
resource again.
This also fixes a crash at surface destruction because of the unchecked
wl_link_remove that will happen on both pointer and surface destroy.
Both the pointer/keyboard resource and surface resource can be destroyed
at any point in the destruction process, so we need to have destroy
listeners on both. To make the code easier to follow, rename ->focus
to ->focus_surface at the same time, and rearrange the code so that
the two of them are always grouped together.
When we have a new client, we potentially set the focus on one of its
surfaces when we map it but the client might not have called
wl_seat.get_keyboard/pointer yet. When it finally calls
get_keyboard/pointer we must then register its resource as the
focus_resource which means that we can only return early if
focus_resource is already set.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=719725
When X clients change the keyboard map, the also update a property
on the root window. We can notice that and rebuild our data structures
with the new values, as well as inform the wayland clients.
This is a terrible hack, and it's not how we want to implement things
in 3.12, but it's enough to have the same keyboard layout in the
shell, in X clients and in wayland clients in 3.10, until we decide
on the fate of the keyboard g-s-d plugin.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=707446
We can't rely on clutter's xkb_state, because that's updated
when events are pulled from the kernel, not when we see them.
Instead, use the new clutter API to get the full modifier state
from the event (which, as a side effect, also works when clutter
is using the X11 backend for running nested).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=706963
Calling XIGrabDevice has no effect under wayland, because the
xserver is getting events from us. Instead, we need to use our
own interfaces for grabs.
At the same time, we can simplify the public API, as plugins
should always listen for events using clutter.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=705917
We need to track the full xkb_state to have the necessary information
to send to the clients, otherwise they may get confused and lock
or invert the modifiers. In the evdev backend, we just retrieve the
same state object that clutter is using, while in the other backends
we fake the state using what clutter is providing (which is a subset
of what X11 provides, which would be necessary to have full state)
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=705862
We need to track the full xkb_state to have the necessary information
to send to the clients, otherwise they may get confused and lock
or invert the modifiers. In the evdev backend, we just retrieve the
same state object that clutter is using, while in the other backends
we fake the state using what clutter is providing (which is a subset
of what X11 provides, which would be necessary to have full state)
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=705862
This copies the basic input support from the Clayland demo compositor.
It adds a basic wl_seat implementation which can convert Clutter mouse
events to Wayland events. For this to work all of the wayland surface
actors need to be made reactive.
The wayland keyboard input focus surface is updated whenever Mutter
sees a FocusIn event so that it will stay in synch with whatever
surface Mutter wants as the focus. Wayland surfaces don't get this
event so for now it will just give them focus whenever they are
clicked as a hack to test the code.
Authored-by: Neil Roberts <neil@linux.intel.com>
Authored-by: Giovanni Campagna <gcampagna@src.gnome.org>