Now that grab and ungrab vfuncs are implemented on GdkDevice then we can use
gdk_device_ungrab to break the implicit grab created by the button press that
triggered the resize and move.
An implicit grab is created inside GTK+ when the button is pressed down on a
window. The semantics of wl_shell_surface_resize means that you don't get a
corresponding release event that would ordinarily break the implicit grab. So
we must do it as part of the resize request.
This change follows on from a change in semantics in Wayland where calling
wl_input_device_attach with nil would make the compositor set the pointer
sprite to it's default cursor sprite.
When the X server does not support the shape extension (as some
vnc implementations seem to), our DND code was always seeing
an empty input shape, so drops always missed their target.
http://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=620240
Apparently the deprecation warning macros are placed into gdkconfig.h
during the configure stage, so put these in the pre-configured
gdkconfig.h.win32 as well, as their definitions are needed for all builds.
Reading a card32 property into a long may lead to undefined high
bits, so mask them off. Also, make the conditions for setting and
unsetting the stick flag opposites, to avoid unintended changes.
Patch by John Lindgren, bug 666842
The current EWMH has added 'source indication' fields to a number
of client messages. Set these to 1 to indicate a regular client.
Also fill the button field of _NET_WM_MOVERESIZE.
==23282== 64 bytes in 2 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 8,069 of 13,389
==23282== at 0x4A074CD: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:236)
==23282== by 0x39A1C3E2EA: cairo_region_create (cairo-region.c:196)
==23282== by 0x6D9AF3D: recompute_visible_regions_internal (gdkwindow.c:964)
==23282== by 0x6D9B4B8: recompute_visible_regions (gdkwindow.c:1126)
==23282== by 0x6DA3450: gdk_window_hide (gdkwindow.c:5689)
==23282== by 0x6D9CED9: _gdk_window_destroy_hierarchy (gdkwindow.c:2042)
==23282== by 0x6D9D040: gdk_window_destroy (gdkwindow.c:2109)
==23282== by 0x655B5E4: gtk_entry_unrealize (gtkentry.c:3012)
==23282== by 0x7068BF3: g_cclosure_marshal_VOID__VOID (gmarshal.c:85)
==23282== by 0x706710B: g_type_class_meta_marshal (gclosure.c:885)
==23282== by 0x7066DF9: g_closure_invoke (gclosure.c:774)
==23282== by 0x7080585: signal_emit_unlocked_R (gsignal.c:3340)
==23282== by 0x707F619: g_signal_emit_valist (gsignal.c:3033)
==23282== by 0x707FB71: g_signal_emit (gsignal.c:3090)
==23282== by 0x679E243: gtk_widget_unrealize (gtkwidget.c:4458)
==23282== by 0x64E83C7: gtk_bin_forall (gtkbin.c:172)
==23282== by 0x6548BBD: gtk_container_forall (gtkcontainer.c:2014)
==23282== by 0x67A966D: gtk_widget_real_unrealize (gtkwidget.c:10253)
==23282== by 0x672D002: gtk_tool_item_unrealize (gtktoolitem.c:474)
==23282== by 0x7068BF3: g_cclosure_marshal_VOID__VOID (gmarshal.c:85)
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=666552
This is a boolean property that will be set to TRUE if the current
desktop environment is capable of displaying the application menu as
part of the desktop shell.
If it is FALSE then the application will need to display the menu for
itself.
We want to avoid handling focus events for the private focus window,
otherwise the keyboard grab taken by for example buttons will cause a
spurious FOCUS_OUT/FOCUS_IN on the toplevel.
The code that did this seems to have been lost in the XI2 transition for
GTK3.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=657578
The function returns the part of a monitors area that should be
used for positioning popups, menus, etc. The only non-trivial
implementation atm is in the X backend, all the other backends
just return the full monitor area. The X implementation is
currently suboptimal, since it requires roundtrips to collect
the necessary information. It should be changed to monitor
the properties for changes, when XFixes allows to monitor
individual properties.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=641999
Dealing with disabled devices may turn into hierarchy/device
changed events on device IDs with no backing GdkDevice yet,
so protect against that. The device attachment will be handled
correctly when the device is enabled later.
For maximized windows, titlebars cannot be used to reposition or
scale the window, so if an application does not use it to convey
useful information (other than the application name), the screen
space occupied by titlebars could be put to better use.
Add a new window property which requests from the window manager
to hide titlebars when windows are maximized to account for this.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=665616
Setup listener functions for the drag and drop events as well as the selection
events. Then create and save a data structure representing the data offer from
the other client.
This implementation is based on a hash table. The hard coded GtkSelection
atoms are preloaded into the hash table at the correct values. User generated
atoms start after the last preloaded atom.
The data device manager is a global object that provides the support
infrastructure around data devices. These data device objects are the basis
for handling drag and drop as well as selections in Wayland.
As pointed out in bug 665999, these were just not right.
Before this commit, the nicks were 'output' and 'only'.
After this commit, they are 'input-output' and 'input-only'.
This means we don't have to have hardcoded "/usr/share/wayland" to find the
cursors.
This change also fixes up the warning messages for when loading fails.
When an implicit paint is flushed during expose, e.g. because a
non-double buffered widget is painting, make sure to copy the existing
data from the window surface we rendered before flushing back to the
paint surface, instead of using an empty base.
Code was already handling that (and said so in the comment), but only
when no implicit paint was used at all, and not in the case when it's
flushed mid-expose.
Previously all the commands that acted on the shell took the surface that was
to be acted on as parameter. Now we retrieve an object from the shell that
represents its state for the surface. With that wl_shell_surface object we can
then call methods on that.
Signed-off-by: Kristian Høgsberg <krh@bitplanet.net>