GTK4 doesn't support arbitrary constraints when resizing a window (e.g.
steps, or aspect ratio), so we don't need to care about the result from
compute-size when doing interactive resizing.
By moving popup layout emission to the layout phase, the current
GdkPopup::poup-layout-changed signal has no value on its own as it'd be
ignored by GtkPopover.
Make the Wayland backend communicate the popup layout changes via the
common signal; but leave the rest intact until other backends catch up.
Put them in a anonymous struct, and separate the toplevel specific ones
into another anonymous struct inside the first one. Later popup related
fields will be added.
GdkSurface's are initialized to have the size 1x1, as otherwise we'd
receive an X11 error, would a corresponding X11 window be created.
This confuses the "saved size" mechanisms in the Wayland backend, as
treats 0 as uninitialized, and not 1.
Fix this simply not saving size that if it's smaller or equal than 1.
Concentrate state application to the start of a frame; this is to avoid
having GTK going back and forth between different state if so would
happen between two frames.
Queue it, and then wait for it to actually take effect, i.e. be
confirmed via a configure event from the compositor, before setting the
actual GdkSurface::state value.
The plan is to concencrate size computations as part of the frame clock
dispatch, meaning we shouldn't do it synchronously in the present()
function.
Still, in Wayland, and maybe elsewhere, it is done in the present()
function, e.g. when no state change was made, but this will eventually
be changed.
Mapping a surface under Wayland is an asynchronous process, where one
creates a surface and commits an initial state without having drawn
anything, then waiting for a configuration, which then is acknowledged
and content is painted and committed. Not until having received this
configuration is a surface actually mapped, so wait with setting the
mappedness until this.
Use the set_minimized method of the xdg_toplevel
interface to implement minimization as well as possible.
It is not possible, since there is no corresponding
state that we could use to update our surface state,
but in practice, it works well enough.
Fixes: #2688
The 'has_uncommitted_ack_configure' state was added to make sure we're
responding to 'xdg_surface.configure' events with
'xdg_surface.ack_configure' requests, as is necessary according to spec.
What we didn't do was to clear this state when hiding, meaning that if
we hid the surface after a configure event, but before the frame
finished and we processed the 'has_uncommitted_ack_configure', we'd try
to acknowledge the surface configuration after having destroyed the
surface.
Closes: #3262
The GdkWayland API takes generic GDK types and performs a run time
check, which means we need to properly annotate the actual expected
type in order to have methods recognised as such.
When using the saved size because the compositor
told us to, we were forgetting to readd the margins.
The visible symptom of this was the window getting
smaller every time we went to tiled state and back.
Don't remember the surface size when we are in tiled
state either. This matches the 'fixed_size' condition
in gdk_wayland_surface_configure_toplevel.
This change fixes an issue where moving a window first
to tiled, then to maximized state and back would lead
to the unmaximized window having the tiled dimensions.
We should not emit configure events before we are realized - size
changes at this point are not relevant.
This gets rid of a mysterious emission of GdkSurface::size-changed
with a size of 52x52, that is happening when GtkWindow sets the
shadow_width before the window is mapped.
Most of the surface api we have in the Wayland backend
only makes sense for toplevels, so reshuffle things to
take a GdkToplevel instead of a GdkSurface.
Update all callers and the docs.
We must wl_surface.commit after xdg_surface.ack_configure to make it
have an effect. We failed to do so when a configure event didn't result
in new updates, so make sure we fall back on an simple
wl_surface.commit if there was no new actual frame painted.
Closes: #2910
In order to make the cairo renderer/context behave more similar to how
the OpenGL and Vulkan renderer/context behaves, request a frame callback
and commit in the end frame vfunc.
This means the end frame vfunc in cairo does
* attach buffer
* request frame callback
* sync surface state
* commit
Where as e.g. the OpenGL version of the same flow does
* attach buffer
* request frame callback
* sync surface state
* eglSwapBuffers()
where eglSwapBuffers() indirectly calls wl_surface_commit().
When we send an anchor rectangle with a width or
height of 0, mutter reponds with "Invalid anchor
rectangle size". So, don't do that.
This was seen as sudden disappearance of gtk4-demo
when you click the fishbowl benchmark all the way
through to the menubuttons.
Fixes: #3027
We might break the loop early, e.g. if we're unmapped before the round
trip finishes, and to avoid the callback to write to invalid stack
memory, destroy the callback so it won't be invoked.
Fixes: #3026
GTK will not up front know how to correctly calculate a size, since it
will not be able to reliably predict the constraints that may exist
where it will be mapped.
Thus, to handle this, calculate the size of the toplevel by having GDK
emitting a signal called 'compute-size' that will contain information
needed for computing a toplevel window size.
This signal may be emitted at any time, e.g. during
gdk_toplevel_present(), or spontaneously if constraints change.
This also drops the max size from the toplevel layout, while moving the
min size from the toplevel layout struct to the struct passed via the
signal,
This needs changes to a test case where we make sure we process
GDK_CONFIGURE etc, which means we also needs to show the window and
process all pending events in the test-focus-chain test case.
This uses the idle-inhibit protocol from wayland-protocols, to attach an
inhibitor to the GdkSurface. The inhibit function can be called as many
times as the user wants, but the uninhibit function MUST be called as
many times to unset the idle inhibition.
This has been tested on Sway.
If you run weston with the headless backend, you get a Wayland
display with no seat, which is just fine by the protocol.
gdk_display_get_default_seat() returns NULL in this case. Various
widgets assume that we always have a seat with a keyboard and a
pointer, since that is what X guarantees. Make things survive
without that, so we can run the testsuite under a headless
Wayland compositor.
If the wl_surface receiving touch events is destroyed, we will get no
wl_touch.up event to remove the touchpoint from our internal accounting.
Check for this, and drop touchpoints happening in surfaces that do
disappear during operation.
We don't create a grabbing popup if it's not the top most one, as that
is a protocol violation, and complain if anything attempts to do it.
What we didn't do is handle this gracefully in the code that tries to
create said popup.
Fix this by dropping the attempt to show the popup on the floor, instead
of setting various state making it look like it succeeded. This won't
actually fix anything, but it'll result in a bit more accurate warnings
logged, as the state more correctly corresponds to the reality.
GdkEvent has been a "I-can't-believe-this-is-not-OOP" type for ages,
using a union of sub-types. This has always been problematic when it
comes to implementing accessor functions: either you get generic API
that takes a GdkEvent and uses a massive switch() to determine which
event types have the data you're looking for; or you create namespaced
accessors, but break language bindings horribly, as boxed types cannot
have derived types.
The recent conversion of GskRenderNode (which had similar issues) to
GTypeInstance, and the fact that GdkEvent is now a completely opaque
type, provide us with the chance of moving GdkEvent to GTypeInstance,
and have sub-types for GdkEvent.
The change from boxed type to GTypeInstance is pretty small, all things
considered, but ends up cascading to a larger commit, as we still have
backends and code in GTK trying to access GdkEvent structures directly.
Additionally, the naming of the public getter functions requires
renaming all the data structures to conform to the namespace/type-name
pattern.
A toplevel will only ever be transient-for to another toplevel, and only
a toplevel will ever be transient-for, so move the field into the
GdkWaylandToplevel, and make it a pointer to another GdkWaylandToplevel.
We them up there, so that code higher up compared to where they are
defined now can make use of them. Also add a few macros for type
checking and casting.
The third version of xdg-shell introduces support for explicit popup
repositioning. If available, make use of this to implement popup
repositioning.
Note that this does *NOT* include atomic parent-child state
synchronization. For that,
https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/wayland/wayland-protocols/issues/13 will
be needed.
This currently uses my own fork of wayland-protocols which adds meson
support, so that we can use it as a subproject. Eventually when
wayland-protocols' meson support lands upstream, we should change it to
point there.
Silence some meson warnings while at it to make CI happy.
This also bumps the glib requirement, since g_warning_once() is used.
With the current implementation, we use a `wl_seat` as the key for our
internal has table where we store the Wayland shortcuts inhibitors.
There is however no technical reason for this, and we could use a
GdkSeat instead, which will ease the implementation of the GdkToplevel
shortcut inhibition API.
There is no shape combining going on anymore, so
call this just gdk_surface_set_input_region, and
remove the offset arguments too. All callers pass
0 anyway.
Update all callers and implementations.
When a popup is already showing, and gdk_surface_present_popup() is
called, if the layout didn't change, we're not really interested in
relayouting.
In the future, we'll be able to get notified if position of the popup
would change by some environmental changes, but until then, just don't
support it.
Restructure the getters for event fields to
be more targeted at particular event types.
Update all callers, and replace all direct
event struct access with getters.
As a side-effect, this drops some unused getters.