Sebastian Keller ff4f8d2aa0 frames: Consider events on fullscreen windows to be on the client area
Fullscreen X11 windows that attempt to change the resolution on Wayland
use a surface viewport to achieve this without affecting the resolution
of the display. This however also means that pointer events will be
delivered in the display coordinates while the code handling the window
frame is not aware of any such viewport scaling. So a right click
outside of the area corresponding to the new resolution will not be
considered to be on the client area. And since the only area that is
ignored when determining whether to perform the right click action, such
as opening the context menu, is the client area, this will result in the
action being performed, despite happening on the (scaled) client area.

While it would be possible to scale the event coordinates so that
get_control() correctly determines the frame element the cursor is on,
viewport scaling only affects fullscreen windows. Since fullscreen
windows have no frame, we can always assume that if the window gets
delivered an event for a fullscreen window, it is on the client area
without doing any additional calculations.

Fixes https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/issues/1592

Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1661>
2021-01-28 15:30:29 +00:00
2021-01-25 15:14:35 +00:00
2019-08-27 09:57:54 +00:00
2021-01-27 20:33:12 +00:00
2018-11-30 11:12:12 +08:00
2021-01-25 15:14:35 +00:00
2021-01-14 17:22:43 +01:00

Mutter

Mutter is a Wayland display server and X11 window manager and compositor library.

When used as a Wayland display server, it runs on top of KMS and libinput. It implements the compositor side of the Wayland core protocol as well as various protocol extensions. It also has functionality related to running X11 applications using Xwayland.

When used on top of Xorg it acts as a X11 window manager and compositing manager.

It contains functionality related to, among other things, window management, window compositing, focus tracking, workspace management, keybindings and monitor configuration.

Internally it uses a fork of Cogl, a hardware acceleration abstraction library used to simplify usage of OpenGL pipelines, as well as a fork af Clutter, a scene graph and user interface toolkit.

Mutter is used by, for example, GNOME Shell, the GNOME core user interface, and by Gala, elementary OS's window manager. It can also be run standalone, using the command "mutter", but just running plain mutter is only intended for debugging purposes.

Contributing

To contribute, open merge requests at https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter.

It can be useful to look at the documentation available at the Wiki.

Coding style and conventions

The coding style used is primarily the GNU flavor of the GNOME coding style with some additions:

  • Use regular C types and stdint.h types instead of GLib fundamental types, except for gboolean, and guint/gulong for GSource ids and signal handler ids. That means e.g. uint64_t instead of guint64, int instead of gint, unsigned int instead of guint if unsignedness is of importance, uint8_t instead of guchar, and so on.

  • Try to to limit line length to 80 characters, although it's not a strict limit.

  • Usage of g_autofree and g_autoptr are encouraged. The style used is

  g_autofree char *text = NULL;
  g_autoptr (MetaSomeThing) thing = NULL;

  text = g_strdup_printf ("The text: %d", a_number);
  thing = g_object_new (META_TYPE_SOME_THING,
                        "text", text,
                        NULL);
  thinger_use_thing (rocket, thing);
  • Declare variables at the top of the block they are used, but avoid non-trivial logic among variable declarations. Non-trivial logic can be getting a pointer that may be NULL, any kind of math, or anything that may have side effects.

  • Instead of boolean arguments in functions, prefer enums or flags when they're more expressive.

  • Use g_new0() etc instead of g_slice_new0().

  • Initialize and assign floating point variables (i.e. float or double) using the form floating_point = 3.14159 or ratio = 2.0.

Git messages

Commit messages should follow the GNOME commit message guidelines. We require an URL to either an issue or a merge request in each commit. Try to always prefix commit subjects with a relevant topic, such as compositor: or clutter/actor:, and it's always better to write too much in the commit message body than too little.

License

Mutter is distributed under the terms of the GNU General Public License, version 2 or later. See the COPYING file for detalis.

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