Adding support for the keyboard shortcuts inhibit protocol allows remote
desktop and virtualisation software to receive all keyboard input in
order to pass it through to their clients so users can fully interact
the their remote/virtual session. The software usually provides its own
key combination to release its "grab" to all keyboard input. The
inhibitor can be deactivated by the user by removing focus from the
surface using another input device such as the pointer.
Use support for the procotol in wlroots to add support to sway. Extend
the input manager with handlers for inhibitor creation and destruction
and appropriate bookkeeping. Attach the inhibitors to the seats they
apply to to avoid having to search the list of all currently existing
inhibitors on every keystroke and passing the inhibitor manager around.
Add a helper function to retrieve the inhibitor applying to the
currently focused surface of a seat, if one exists.
Extend bindsym with a flag for bindings that should be processed even if
an inhibitor is active. Conversely this disables all normal shortcuts if
an inhibitor is found for the currently focused surface in
keyboard::handle_key_event() since they don't have that flag set. Use
above helper function to determine if an inhibitor exists for the
surface that would eventually receive input.
Signed-off-by: Michael Weiser <michael.weiser@gmx.de>
Fix a typo in the bit mask value of the BINDING_RELOAD flag introduced
in commit 152e30c37 so it can work as intended.
Signed-off-by: Michael Weiser <michael.weiser@gmx.de>
This enables/disables adaptive synchronization on the output.
For now, the default is disabled because it might cause flickering on
some hardware if clients don't submit frames at regular enough
intervals. In the future an "auto" option will only enable adaptive sync
if a fullscreen client opts-in via a Wayland protocol.
This can be used as a workaround to flag terminal windows as urgent when
commands are completed, until urgency is introduced in the Wayland
protocol.
Configure your shell to run `swaymsg "[pid=$PPID] urgent enable"` when
commands are completed, and use a terminal which uses one process per
window.
The output manager config is created when the output is created. It is
updated when the mode, transform, scale, or layout for the output
changes, as well as, when the output is destroyed.
Since the output->enabled property was not being set before calling
apply_output_config, the output event handlers were early returning and
never updating the output manager config when the output state was
committed.
This fixes the issue by setting output->enabled in apply_output_config
below the output disabling section. There are also a few other minor
changes that are required to function.
Additionally, this renames output_enable to output_configure to better
describe the recent changes.
The only output_enable caller is now apply_output_config. Stop calling
apply_output_config from output_enable to simplify the code and avoid
the back-and-forth between these two functions.
output_enable is now the symmetric of output_disable: it just marks the
output as enabled and performs bookkeeping (e.g. creating teh default
workspace). It is called from apply_output_config after the output
commit, so that it can read the current output state and act
accordingly.
This change also allows us to avoid an extraneous wlr_output_commit.
References: https://github.com/swaywm/sway/issues/4921
24e8ba048a did not take scaling into account.
The hotspot size used pixel coordinates, the absolute coordinates were logical,
and the relative coordinates were completely wrong.
This commit makes all coordinates use logical values. If
`"float_event_coords":true` is sent in the handshake message, coordinates are
sent as floating-point values.
The "scale" field is an integer containing the scale value.
Closes#4929
Replaces criteria_get_views with criteria_get_containers which can
return containers without views when the criteria only contains
container properties.
If a view is mapped to a workspace using an assign, the pid should still
be removed from the pid mapping list. This prevents child processes from
matching against it and mapping a view to a likely undesired workspace.
This adds a listener for the destroy event of the cursor image surface.
This prevents a use-after-free when the last visible image surface is
freed, there has not been a new cursor set, and the cursor is reshown.
Containers are always fixed to the pixel grid so position and size them
with integers instead of doubles.
Functionally this should be no different since rounding down is already
being done on things like layout. But it makes it clear what the
intention is and avoids bugs where fractional pixels are used. The
translating and moving code is still using doubles because the cursors
can have fractional pixels and thus the code is plumbed that way. But
that could also probably be changed easily by doing the integer
conversions earlier and plumbing with int.
Because the layout code rounds down the dimensions of the windows
resizing would often be off by one pixel. The width/height fraction
would not exactly reflect the final computed width and so the resize
code would end up calculating things wrong.
To fix this first snap the container size fractions to the pixel grid
and only then do the resize. Also use round() instead of floor() during
layout to avoid a slightly too small width. This applies in two cases:
1. For the container we are actually resizing using floor() might result
in being 1px too small.
2. For the other containers it might result in resizing them down by 1px
and then if the container being resized is the last all those extra
pixels would make the resize too large.
Fixes#4391
This is the third commit in a series of commits to refactor color
handling in sway. This removes add_color from commands.c. It was only
being used by bar_cmd_colors. This also changes the functions to use
parse_color which is used to validate rgb(a) colors throughout the code
base and is also what i3bar is using to parse the colors after they are
passed over ipc. After parsing the color and ensuring it is valid, the
rgba hex string is then generated using snprintf. This refactor also
ensures that all the colors for the command are valid before applying
any of them.
This is the second in a series of commits to refactor the color handling
in sway. This removes the duplicated color parsing code in
sway/commands/client.c. Additionally, this combines the parsing of
colors to float arrays with that in sway/config.c and introduces a
color_to_rgba function in commom/util.c.
As an added bonus, this also makes it so non of the colors in a border
color class will be changed unless all of the colors specified are
valid. This ensures that an invalid command does not get partially
applied.
This is the first in a series of commits to refactor the color handling
in sway. This changes parse_color to return whether it was success and
no longer uses 0xFFFFFFFF as the fallback color. This also verifies that
the string actually contains a valid hexadecimal number along with
the length checks.
In the process of altering the calls to parse_color, I also took the
opportunity to heavily refactor swaybar's ipc_parse_colors function.
This allowed for several lines of duplicated code to be removed.
This removes `seat <seat> keyboard_grouping keymap` and replaces it with
`seat <seat> keyboard_grouping smart`. The smart keyboard grouping will
group based on both the keymap and repeat info. The reasoning for this
is that deciding what the repeat info should be for a group is either
arbitrary or non-deterministic when multiple keyboards in the group have
repeat info configured (unless somehow exposed to the user in a
reproducible uniquely identifiable fashion).
This adds seat configuration options which can be used to configure what
events affect the idle behavior of sway.
An example use-case is mobile devices: you would remove touch from the
list of idle_wake events. This allows the phone to stay on while you're
actively using it, but doesn't wake from idle on touch events while it's
sleeping in your pocket.
Some wayland clients (mostly GTK3 apps) like eog or evince support
gestures like pinch-to-zoom. These gestures are given to clients
via the pointer_gestures_v1 protocol. This is already supported in
wlroots, so we just need to hook up the events here in sway.
Fixes#4724
Repaint scheduling delays output render and frame done events from
output frame events, and block idle frame events from being scheduled in
between output frame done and output render in this period of time.
If a surface is committed after its frame done event, but before output
render, idle frame requests will be blocked, and the surface relies on
the upcoming render to schedule a frame.
If when the repaint timer expires, output render is deemed unnecessary,
no frame will be scheduled. This can lead to surfaces never having their
frame callbacks fire.
To fix this, we store that a surface has requested a frame in
surface_needs_frame. When the repaint expires, if no render is deemed
necessary, we check this flag and schedule an idle frame.
Fixes#4768
A wlr_keyboard_group allows for multiple keyboard devices to be
combined into one logical keyboard. This is useful for keyboards that
are split into multiple input devices despite appearing as one physical
keyboard in the user's mind.
This adds support for wlr_keyboard_groups to sway. There are two
keyboard groupings currently supported, which can be set on a per-seat
basis. The first keyboard grouping is none, which disables all grouping
and provides no functional change. The second is keymap, which groups
the keyboard devices in the seat by their keymap. With this grouping,
the effective layout and repeat info is also synced across keyboard
devices in the seat. Device specific bindings will still be executed as
normal, but everything else related to key and modifier events will be
handled by the keyboard group's keyboard.
set_cloexec is defined by both sway and wlroots (and who-knows-else),
so rename the sway one for supporting static linkage. We also remove
the duplicate version of this in client/.
Fixes: https://github.com/swaywm/sway/issues/4677
Calling wlr_output_manager_v1_set_configuration with an enabled output
and a NULL mode is incorrect if the output doesn't support modes.
When DPMS'ing an output, wlr_output_enable(output, false) is called.
This de-allocates the CRTC and sets wlr_output.current_mode to NULL.
Because we mark DPMS'ed outputs as enabled, we also need to provide a
correct output mode. Add a field to sway_output to hold the current
mode.
Closes: https://github.com/swaywm/wlroots/issues/1867
In case a tray icon cannot be found or does not have a desirable size,
swaybar retries the search again and again, which increases load on disk
and CPU. This commit solves it by storing target_size for each icon, so
that swaybar does not search for an icon of some size if it already tried to.
Fixes#3789.
Sway has basic support for drawing tablets, but does not expose
properties such as pressure sensitivity. This implements the wlr tablet
v2 protocol, providing tablet events to Wayland clients.
This adds complete support for the barconfig_update ipc event. This also
changes the bar command and subcommand handlers to correctly emit the
event. This makes it so all bar subcommands other than id and
swaybar_command are dynamically changeable at runtime. sway-bar.5 has
been updated accordingly
This just adds a force option to cmd_xwayland that allows for xwayland
to be immediately launched instead of lazily launched. This is useful
for slower machines so it can be part of the startup time instead of
when the user is actively trying to use it
This keeps track of whether surfaces received a key press event and
will only send a key release event if the pressed event was sent. This
also requires changing the keycodes that are sent via wl_keyboard_enter
to only include those that were previously sent. This makes it so
surfaces do not receive key release events for keys that they never
received a key press for and makes it so switching focus doesn't leak
keycodes that were consumed by bindings.
This adds support for specifying a binding for a specific group. Any
binding without a group listed will be available in all groups. The
priority for matching bindings is as follows: input device, group, and
locked state.
For full compatibility with i3, this also adds Mode_switch as an alias
for Group2. Since i3 only supports this for backwards compatibility
with older versions of i3, it is implemented here, but not documented.
The documentation for wayland-server.h says:
> Use of this header file is discouraged. Prefer including
> wayland-server-core.h instead, which does not include the server protocol
> header and as such only defines the library PI, excluding the deprecated API
> below.
Replacing wayland-server.h with wayland-server-core.h allows us to drop the
WL_HIDE_DEPRECATED declaration.
This commit si similar to wlroots' ca45f4490ccc ("Remove all wayland-server.h
includes").
This adds a libinput_config change type to the input event for when
the libinput config for a device changes
In order for this to be possible to track, the libinput config code
had to be refactored. It is now extracted into a separate file to
isolate it from the rest of the input management code.
This adds an ipc event related to input devices. Currently the
following changes are supported:
- added: when an input device becomes available
- removed: when an input device is no longer available
- xkb_keymap_changed: (keyboards only) the keymap changed
- xkb_layout_changed: (keyboards only) the effective layout changed
Adds a new commend "xkb_file", which constructs the internal
xkb_keymap from a xkb file rather than an RMLVO configuration.
This allows greater flexibility when specifying xkb configurations.
An xkb file can be dumped with the xkbcomp program.
Instead of tracking gaps per child apply gaps in two logical places:
1. In tiled containers use the layout code to add the gaps between
windows. This is much simpler and guarantees that the sizing of children
is correct.
2. In the workspace itself apply all the gaps around the edge. Here
we're in the correct position to size inner and outer gaps correctly and
decide on smart gaps in a single location.
Fixes#4296
Because meson does not provide a simple way to get the relative build
path, it is computed with a pair of foreach loops. As meson does not
have a simple way to compute string length (except via underscorify
and 63 split operations), the build script uses a shell command
instead.
If the compiler does not suppot -fmacro-prefix-map, then fall back
to passing in the relative path prefix, and use its length to offset
the uses of __FILE__ in log messages so that the build path is at
least still not included in the logs. This is significantly more
efficient than calling _sway_strip_path.
Instead of using container->width/height as both the input and output
of the layout calculation have container->width_fraction/height_fraction
as the share of the parent this container occupies and calculate the
layout based on that. That way the container arrangement can always be
recalculated even if width/height have been altered by things like
fullscreen.
To do this several parts are reworked:
- The vertical and horizontal arrangement code is ajusted to work with
fractions instead of directly with width/height
- The resize code is then changed to manipulate the fractions when
working on tiled containers.
- Finally the places that manipulated width/height are adjusted to
match. The adjusted parts are container split, swap, and the input
seat code.
It's possible that some parts of the code are now adjusting width and
height only for those to be immediately recalculated. That's harmless
and since non-tiled containers are still sized with width/height
directly it may avoid breaking other corner cases.
Fixes#3547Fixes#4297
This adds a --reload flag to cmd_bindswitch that allows for the binding
to be executed on reload. One possible use case for this is to allow
users to disable outputs when the lid closes and enable them when the
lid opens without having to open and re-close the lid after a reload.
Without this change, the handlers listed in the config_handlers or
command_handlers arrays (depending on reading or active) in commands.c
would be valid subcommands. To make matters worse, they would also take
precedence over the defined subcommand handlers.
This corrects find_handler to only work on the handler array given
instead of implicitly trying others.
Currently container_replace removes the container from the scratchpad
and re-adds it afterwards. For the split commands this results in the
container being send to the scratchpad, which results in a NULL segfault
if the same container should be shown.
Pass an optional workspace to root_scratchpad_add_container, if the
workspace is passed the window will continue to show on the workspace.
If NULL is passed it is sent to the scratchpad.
This was an issue if no other window except the scratchpad container was
on the workspace.
Fixes#4240
This adds the logic to defer binding execution while sway is still
initializing. Without this, the binding command would be executed, but
the command handler would return CMD_DEFER, which was being treated as
a failure to run. To avoid partial executions, this will defer all
bindings while config->active is false.
This patch fixes faulty command parsing introduced by
f0f5de9a9e. When that commit allowed
criteria reset on ';' delimeters in commands lists, it failed to account
for its inner ','-parsing loop eating threw the entire rest of the
string.
This patch refactors argsep to use a list of multiple separators, and
(optionally) return the separator that it matched against in this
iteration via a pointer. This allows it to hint at the command parser
which separator was used at the end of the last command, allowing it to
trigger a potential secondary read of the criteria.
Fixes#4239
This allows for an optional validation stage when storing an input
config. Currently, only the xkb keymap is validated. If storing the
delta input config will result in any invalid xkb keymaps, the input
config will not be stored and error will be populated with the first
line of the xkbcommon log.
Before the delta input config is stored, this attempts to compile a
keymap with it. If the keymap fails to compile, then the first line of
the xkbcommon log entry will be included with a `CMD_FAILURE`, the
entire xkbcommon log entry will be included in the sway error log, and
the delta will not be stored.
This only handles basic issues such as a layouts not existing. This
will NOT catch more complex issues such as when a variant does
exist, but not for the given layout (ex: `azerty` is a valid variant,
but the `us` layout does not have a `azerty` variant).
New 'seat <name> xcursor_theme <theme> [<size>]' command that
configures the default xcursor theme.
The default seat's xcursor theme is also propagated to XWayland, and
exported through the XCURSOR_THEME and XCURSOR_SIZE environment
variables. This is done every time the default seat's configuration is
changed.
Subsurfaces need access to the parent get_root_coords impl for positioning in
popups. To do this, we store a reference to the parent view_child where
applicable.
Fixes#4191.
This attempts to use the default keymap when the one defined in the
input config fails to compile. The goal is to make it so the keyboard
is always in a usable state, even if it is not the user's requested
settings as usability is more important.
This also removes the calls to `getenv` for the `XKB_DEFAULT_*` family
of environment variables. The reasoning is libxkbcommon will fallback
to using those (and then the system defaults) when any of the rule
names are `NULL` or an empty string anyway so there is no need for
sway to duplicate the efforts.
* `bindsym --to-code` enables keysym to keycode translation.
* If there are no `xkb_layout` commands in the config file, the translation
uses the XKB_DEFAULT_LAYOUT value.
* It there is one or more `xkb_layout` command, the translation uses
the first one.
* If the translation is unsuccessful, a message is logged and the binding
is stored as BINDING_KEYSYM.
* The binding keysyms are stored and re-translated when a change in the input
configuration may affect the translated bindings.
The new upstream is https://github.com/swaywm/swaybg
This commit also refactors our use of gdk-pixbuf a bit, since the only
remaining reverse dependency is swaybar tray support.
This allows swaybar to become visible when the mode changes (to any
mode other than the default). swaybar will be hidden again when the
modifier is pressed and released or when switching back to the default
mode.
This also applies the same logic to visible by urgency to hide swaybar
when the modifier is pressed and released.
These changes are to match i3's behavior.
This revamps the type configs for swaynag. All sizing attributes for
swaynag are now `ssize_t` instead of `uint32_t` to allow for a default
value of `-1`, which allows for `0` to be a valid value. Additionally,
the initialization of the type configs has been changed from a simple
calloc to use a new function `swaynag_type_new`. `swaynag_type_new`
calloc's the memory, checks for an allocation failure, sets the name,
and all sizes to -1. The layering order has also been changed to
default, general config, type config, and as highest priority command
line arguments. Finally, `swaynag_type_merge` has been modified to
handle the layering and sizing changes.
This adds a 3 second timeout to the initial reply in swaymsg. This
prevents swaymsg from hanging when `swaymsg -t get_{inputs,seats}` is
used in i3. The timeout is removed when waiting for a subscribed event
or monitoring for subscribed events.
This also adds type checks to commands where i3 does not reply with all
of the properties that sway does (such as `modes` in `get_outputs`).
This is mostly just a behavioral adjustment since swaymsg should run on
i3. When running under i3, some command reply's (such as the one for
`get_outputs) may have more useful information in the raw json than the
pretty printed version.
Add support for configurations that apply to a type of inputs
(i.e. natural scrolling on all touchpads). A type config is
differentiated by a `type:` prefix followed by the type it
corresponds to.
When new devices appear, the device config is merged on top of its
type config (if it exists). New type configs are applied on top of
existing configs.
Use libinput_device_config_tap_get_finger_count to determine whether
a pointer is a touchpad.
swaymsg is also updated to reflect the new touchpad type.
When setting fullscreen on a hidden scratchpad container, there was a
check to see if there was an existing fullscreen container on the
workspace so it could be fullscreen disabled first. Since the workspace
is NULL, it would cause a SIGSEGV. This adds a NULL check to avoid the
crash.
This also changes the behavior of how fullscreen is handled when adding
a container to the scratchpad or changing visibility of a scratchpad
container to match i3's. The behavior is as follows:
- When adding a container to the scratchpad or hiding a container back
into the scratchpad, there is an implicit fullscreen disable
- When setting fullscreen on a container that is hidden in the
scratchpad, it will be fullscreen when shown (and fullscreen disabled
when hidden as stated above)
- When setting fullscreen global on a container that is hidden in the
scratchpad, it will be shown immediately as fullscreen global. The
container is not moved to a workspace and remains in the
scratchpad. The container will be visible until fullscreen disabled
or killed. Since the container is in the scratchpad, running
`scratchpad show` or `move container to scratchpad` will have no
effect
This also changes `container_replace` to transfer fullscreen and
scratchpad status.
This honors the fullscreen output request for
`xdg_toplevel_set_fullscreen` and `zxdg_toplevel_v6_set_fullscreen`.
If the request was sent before mapping, the fullscreen output request
will be retrieved from the client_pending state for the toplevel. The
output will be passed to `view_map` and if there is a workspace on the
output, the view will be placed on that workspace.
If the request comes in after being mapped, the view will be moved to
the workspace on the output (if there is one) before becoming
fullscreen.