Remove some obvious server grabs from the window creation codepath,
also ones that are taken at startup.
During startup, there is no need to grab: we install the event handlers
before querying for the already-existing windows, so there is no danger
that we will 'lose' some window. We might try to create a window twice
(if it comes back in the original query and then we get an event for it)
but the code is already protected against such conditions.
When windows are created later, we also do not need grabs, we just need
appropriate error checking as the window may be destroyed at any time
(or it may have already been destroyed).
The stack tracker is unaffected here - as it listens to CreateNotify and
DestroyNotify events and responds directly, the internal stack
representation will always be consistent even if the window goes away while
we are processing MapRequest or similar.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=721345
The return code of XGetWindowAttributes() indicates whether an error
was encountered or not. There is no need to specifically check the error
trap.
The trap around XAddToSaveSet() was superfluous. We have a global error
trap to ignore any errors here, and there is no need to XSync() as GDK
will later ignore the error asynchronously if one is raised.
Also move common error exit path to an error label.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=721345
In meta_screen_manage_all_windows() we can use our own stack
tracker to get the list of windows - no need to query X again.
A copy is needed because the stack gets modified as part of the loop.
Specifically, meta_stack_tracker_get_stack() at this time returns the
predicted stack, and meta_window_new() performs a few operations
(e.g. framing) which cause immediate changes to the predicted stack.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=721345
meta_window_ensure_frame() creates its own grab and has a comment
claiming that it must be called under a grab too.
But the reasoning given in the comment does not seem relevant here.
We only frame non-override-redirect windows, so we are creating
the frame in response to MapRequest. There is no way that the child
could receive a MapNotify at this point, since that only happens
much later, once we go through the CALC_SHOWING queue and call
XMapWindow() from meta_window_show().
Remove the unnecessary grab.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=721345
Server grabs are not as evil as you might expect, but there is agreement
in that their usage should be limited.
Server grabs can cause things to go rather wrong when mutter emits
a signal while it has grabbed the server. If the receiver of that signal
waits for a synchronous action performed by another client, then you
have a deadlock. This happens with Mali binary GLESv2 drivers :(
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=721345
The compositor code used to handle X windows that didn't have a
corresponding MetaWindow (see commit d538690b), which is why the
attribute query is separated.
As that doesn't happen any more, we can clean up. No functional changes.
Suggested by Owen Taylor.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=721345
When we move focus elsewhere when unmanaging a window, we *need* to move
the focus, so if the target is globally active, move the focus to the
no-focus-window in anticipation that the focus will normally get moved
to the right window when the target window responds to WM_TAKE_FOCUS.
If the window doesn't respond to WM_TAKE_FOCUS, then focus will be left
on the no-focus-window, but there's no way to distinguish whether the
app will respond or not.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=711618
When a client spontaneously focuses their window, perhaps in response
to WM_TAKE_FOCUS we'll get a FocusOut/FocusIn pair with same serial.
Updating display->focus_serial in response to FocusOut then was causing
us to ignore FocusIn and think that the focus was not on any window.
We need to distinguish this spontaneous case from the case where we
set the focus ourselves - when we set the focus ourselves, we're careful
to combine the SetFocus with a property change so that we know definitively
what focus events we have already accounted for.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=720558
In the past, MetaWindowGroup was allocated the size of the screen and
painted the size of the screen because it contained the screen background,
but now we also have the "top window group" which contains only popup
windows, so the allocation doesn't properly reflect the paint bounds
of the window group. Compute the paint bounds accurately from the
children.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=719669
Clients like on-screen keyboards try not to take focus when the user clicks
on their window by setting the Input hint to false. However, due to GTK+ and
GDK bugs, the public API for setting the Input hint to false don't remove
WM_TAKE_FOCUS from WM_PROTOCOLS, unintentionally putting them into Globally
Active mode.
These clients also expect that since they don't want to take focus, they want
the focus to remain on the existing window. In this case, for clients like
on-screen keyboards, it's so they can send synthesized keyboard events to the
focused window.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=710296
Use the "hotplug_mode_update" connector property indicating that the
screen settings should be updated: get a new preferred mode on hotplug
events to handle dynamic guest resizing (where you resize the host
window and the guest resizes with it).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=711216
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
The part of code dealing with move/resize grab in display.c is only
responsible of this behavior when triggered with a modifier. So it
shouldn't stop the move/resize behavior triggered from a mouse event
without modifier on the title bar or sides of the window.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=704759
The current time offset calculation is wrong. It is supposed to calculate
the offset between the current time and the
"time where it message should be sent" (last_time + interval).
Fix the math to actually do that.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=709340
The destroy notify for a DBus watch holds a reference to the IdleMonitor,
but the IdleMonitorWatch object doesn't (it knows all watches will
be destroyed before the monitor is, so it doesn't need one). This
means that the DBus watch reference can be the only one keeping
the IdleMonitor alive (expecially true for device idle monitors,
which are only used by g-s-d/cursor), and that means that calling
the destroy notify freezes the monitor (and the next X calls
access garbage).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=708420
If you maximize a CSD window on a monitor without struts, it ends
up taking the whole monitor size, but it doesn't mean that the
application wants to fullscreen.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=708718
We must set size_changed even if we are frozen, as every window
size change makes the X server drop the pixmap, and we might lose
the information at the next thaw() if the window changes size
twice in one frame (so we would keep drawing with the old pixmap
until something else causes another resize)
Fix done together with Giovanni Campagna <gcampagn@redhat.com>
Need two passes, because the order we traverse the array is
alphabetical on connector name, not left to right, so we might
see a monitor on the right before we get the offset from disabling
the primary monitor.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=707473
The XSync semantics mandate that alarms already expired will not
fire until the counter is reset and the alarm triggered again, so
clients traditionally called get_idle_time() first to see if they
should install the alarm.
This is inherently racy, as by the time the call is handled by
mutter and the reply received the idle time could be different.
Instead, if we see that the watch would have fired in the past,
fire it immediately.
This is a behavior change, but it's a compatible one, as all legacy
clients are calling get_idle_time() first, and it was perfectly
possible for the idle time counter to trigger the alarm right
after the get_idle_time() call.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=707302