The "calc showing" operation is queued in a few places alongside MetaWindow
creation, we should be ignoring these until there is a buffer to show.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=750552
Mutter generates a motion event for every button and scroll events,
which confuses Xwayland apps that rely on XMotionEvents for various
purposes, e.g. it fools rxvt jumpy mouse detection code.
Remove the call to notify_motion() from the button and scroll event
handlers to avoid these spurious motion events.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=748705
This way, we won't be hit with BadValue errors if we set it to a value
outside the X device's range. This can happen for touchpads without
two-finger scrolling, for instance.
According to the xdg-shell protocol specification the (x, y) coordinates
passed when creating a popup surface is relative to top left corner of
the parent surface, but prior to this patch, if the parent surface was
a xdg_surface, it'd position it relative to top left corner of the
window geometry of that xdg_surface.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=749716
Instead of selecting the first drm mode as the preferred mode, select the
first drm mode marked as preferred. If there are no modes marked as
preferred, revert to the old behaviour and select the first mode.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Hellstrom <thellstrom@vmware.com>
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=750363
Read the drm layout properties suggested_X, suggested_Y and
hotplug_mode_update and transfer them to the meta layer.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Hellstrom <thellstrom@vmware.com>
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=750363
The monitors info structure is created from the tiled outputs
and this is used as the central storage for info about a monitor
as opposed to the output state.
It appears at least the EDID mm w/h is for the whole monitor and
not per tile.
this just adds backend support for retrieving the tile
information from X11 (randr 1.5) and native backends.
It stores the tiling information into the output struct.
When DnD is started from an X11 client, mutter now sets up an special
grab that 1) Ensures the drag source keeps receiving events, and 2)
Moves an internal X Window over wayland clients as soon as the pointer
enters over these.
That window will act as the X-side peer for the currently focused
wayland client, and will transform XdndEnter/Position/Leave/Drop
messages into wayland actions. If DnD happens between X11 clients,
the window will be moved away and unmapped, to let these operate as
usual.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=738312
X11 client windows now hook a X11-specific MetaWaylandDragDestFuncs
that converts these into Xdnd* messages, and an additional selection
bridge has been added to take care of XdndSelection, and the data
transfers done through it.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=738312
This will be useful in order to interact with drag dest surfaces in
its windowing-specific ways, although everything defaults to the
wayland vfuncs.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=738312
window->is_alive isn't initialized explicitly so it defaults to FALSE
meaning that if the first ping fails we'd short circuit and not show
the delete dialog as we should.
We could initialize the variable to TRUE but in fact we don't even
need the variable at all since our dialog management is enough to
manage all the state we need, i.e. we're only interested in knowing
whether we're already displaying a delete dialog.
This does change our behavior here since previously we wouldn't
display the dialog again if the next ping failed after the dialog is
dismissed but this was arguably a bug too since in that case there
wouldn't be a way to kill the window after waiting for a while and the
window kept being unresponsive.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=749711
This makes gnome-settings-daemon turn on the backlight and
gnome-shell's screen shield animate.
Note that on X sessions, gnome-settings-daemon uses the same upower
property to force an innocuous key event into the X server so that the
idle time gets reset since Xorg doesn't do this itself on lid events.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=749076
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
Expose it partly (in internal headers anyway), and pass a vtable for the
data source functions, the wayland vfuncs just delegate operations on the
wl_data_source resource. The resource has been also made optional, although
it'll be present on all data sources from wayland clients.
The ownership/lifetime of the DnD data source has also changed a bit,
belonging now to the MetaWaylandDataDevice like the selection one does, as
we can't guarantee how long it will be needed after the grab is finished,
it will be left inert and replaced the next time DnD is started at worst.
This allows the creation of custom/proxy data sources, which will turn out
useful for X11 selection interoperation.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=738312
We'll need to get the value of some properties. Fail if the number of
items returned is less than we expect and warn if it exceeds it so
that we can easily find out if items are added to a property later and
fix it.
The corresponding wl_notify field for destroy_data_device_icon()
is drag_grab->drag_icon_listener, otherwise we're fetching a pointer
that's slightly off where we want.
When running as an X11 compositor we do this for every event we see on
the X event stream. As a wayland compositor we don't go through that
code path but since we see all events we can easily do this on motion
events.
In fact, we don't even need this caching when we're a wayland
compositor since we can always find where the pointer is without a
round trip but we're sharing the current monitor logic with the X
path so let's keep it as is for now.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=748478
Some DRM drivers have added a consistent set of properties that
allow compensating for the overscan that some TVs do, without the
user being able to disable.