gdk: do not deactivate surface on keyboard grabs

When pressing e.g. a window manager shortcut, which acquires keyboard grab,
Xorg would send FocusOut NotifyGrab then FocusIn NotifyUngrab.  Currently
gdk would then deactivate the current surface, which makes accessibility
screen readers think that we have switched to a non-accessible application
and came back again, and thus reannounce the application frame etc. which we
don't want when e.g. just raising volume.

And actually, receiving FocusOut NotifyGrab does not mean losing the
X focus, it only means an application aqcuired a grab, i.e. it is
temporarily stealing keyboard events. On Wayland, this isn't even
notified actually.

This commit makes gdk only deactivate surfaces when there was an actual
focus switch to another window, as determined by has_focus_window (instead
of just has_focus), which happens either normally through FocusOut with
NotifyNormal, or during grabs through FocusOut with NotifyWhileGrabbed.

Fixes #85
This commit is contained in:
Samuel Thibault 2018-04-19 14:10:23 +02:00
parent 3684b72121
commit 01455399e8
2 changed files with 2 additions and 2 deletions

View File

@ -32,7 +32,7 @@
#define HAS_FOCUS(toplevel) \
((toplevel)->has_focus || (toplevel)->has_pointer_focus)
((toplevel)->has_focus_window || (toplevel)->has_pointer_focus)
static void gdk_x11_device_manager_core_finalize (GObject *object);
static void gdk_x11_device_manager_core_constructed (GObject *object);

View File

@ -37,7 +37,7 @@ static void gdk_event_source_finalize (GSource *source);
static GQuark quark_needs_enter = 0;
#define HAS_FOCUS(toplevel) \
((toplevel)->has_focus || (toplevel)->has_pointer_focus)
((toplevel)->has_focus_window || (toplevel)->has_pointer_focus)
struct _GdkEventSource
{