default_grab_focus tries to add implicit grab semantics where
focus won't take effect if there's a pointer button down. This
is not what we want for popup grabs at all, as it's perfectly
valid to want to drag on a menu while there's a button down.
The idea here is that while we take a WM-side grab, like a compositor
grab or a resizing grab, we need to remove the focus from the Wayland
client.
We make a special exception for CLICKING operations, because these
are really an internal state machine while you're pressing on a button
inside a frame, and in this case, we need to not kill the focus.
Really, it is a special case. When the subsurface is synchronous,
commit changes meaning from being applied immediately to being
queued up for replay later. Handle this explicit special case
with an explicit special case in the code.
This means that in all other paths, we can unconditionally
apply the actor immediately.
Even when it doesn't have a role.
This fixes cursors not quite working right, as they're a "detached"
surface without a role since nobody called set_cursor on them yet.
Instead of using commit_attached_buffer / actor_surface_commit.
We want to kill the return values of these methods because we
really should always be calling them, even if the surface doesn't
have a role.
This is also something that we did upstream. Since we want to
introduce an explicit "xdg_transient" window type for tooltips
and popovers, and since "transient_for" is a confusing dumb
80s term lifted from the ICCCM spec, just rename it.
This was changed upstream a little while ago for C++ compatibility.
It's also the more common term for the operation: you close a window,
you don't delete one. In fact, a delete event might seem like it
would be about resource management instead.
Except while reading _NET_WM_WINDOW_OPACITY, opacity is between 0 and 255. With
guint8, we'll get compiler warnings if arbitrary int values are passed.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=727874
This has one regression: the basic touch support added by
Carlos Garnacho in 991c85f is now partially reverted, since
we ported to Clutter events for this. We'll need to either
port his changes to Clutter, or restructure event handling
in mutter directly.
We can't really support the Gtk+ automatic scaling, as to much
code relies on the GdkWindow and XWindow sizes, etc to match.
In order to keep working we just disable the scaling, meaning
we will pick up the larger fonts, but nothing else. Its not
ideal but it works for now.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=706388
Due to changes in gnome-common git, an implicit m4 directory is no
longer created during autogen. The attached patch explicitly and
correctly specifies a macro directory.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=706787
When _GTK_FRAME_EXTENTS changes, we need to redo constraints on
the window - this matters in particular if the toolkit removes
invisible borders when a window is maximized, since otherwise
the maximized window will be positioned as if it still has
invisible borders.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=714707
A gulong is not enough to get 64 bits in all arches, so we must
cast it, or we can corrupt the stack.
This was downstream bug bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1002055
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=707267
Apparently some connector technologies don't distinguish between
on and off, and there might be valid use cases for running without
any connected monitor.
In that case, just avoid any configuration at all.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=709009
Each level in the tower is initialized by binding the texture for that
level to an offscreen framebuffer and rendering the previous level as a
textured rectangle. The problem was that we were blending the previous
level with undefined data so argb32 windows with transparencies would
result in artefacts. This makes sure to disable blending when drawing
the textured rectangle.
After reading the atom, scale the value from 0xffffffff to 0xff. Not doing so
causes Clutter to truncate the opacity value, and only read the last two digits.
Hence, 0x7fffffff (50%) becomes 0xff (100%).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=727874
After reading the atom, scale the value from 0xffffffff to 0xff. Not doing so
causes Clutter to truncate the opacity value, and only read the last two digits.
Hence, 0x7fffffff (50%) becomes 0xff (100%).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=727874
A careful analysis of mutter's codebase shows that nothing actually
passes anything but 0 to this. gnome-shell has one instance, but it's
most likely a mistake.
Remove the grab_mask field and the one place in keybindings.c that uses it.
The parameter to begin_grab_op is left in for API compatibility reasons.