This is so we always have the latest information given by XRandR (or other), and not
rely on Core protocol information that might not have been updated yet.
This is specially visible when a monitor is connected (less frequent) or disconnected
(much more frequent), callbacks on GdkScreen::monitors-changed that call
gdk_screen_get_width/height() could get the screen size previous to the monitor
rearrangement.
So in order to fix this, keep track of the latest monitors information, and calculate
the bounding box in order to know the screen size.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=715029
Scroll valuators were being just appended again and again, leading
to 1) a growing memory issue anytime a device changed 2) the first
scroll valuators to stay permanent on the application lifetime, as
the first stored valuators would always match.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=705203
Passive grabs may take pointer focus out of the application, even though
the pointer didn't leave the window, but those events still trigger resetting
of the scroll axes. This is most visible with compiz, and possibly other
reparenting WMs, where passive grabs happen on the WM-managed window that
is a parent of the application toplevel.
As it is not possible to have scrolling happening on the timespan a passive
grab takes action, it is entirely safe for GTK+ to assume none happened if
it gets a crossing event of that nature.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=699574#c33
This information will be useful in case someone stumbles on a situation
similar to https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=699574, so we can
figure out where do the crossing events come from or go to easily.
It's been reported in several applications that scrolling feels jerky
since commit cc7b3985b3.
Investigation reported that the combination of passive 4-7 button grabs
on the toplevel and the presence of native subwindows might trigger
too often crossing events from the child window to the toplevel and
back as scroll "buttons" trigger the passive grab. Those crossing events
would reset the scroll valuators rendering scrolling from jerky on
touchpads (where there's intermediate smooth events between the emulated
button ones) to ineffective on regular mouse wheels (where the crossing
event would reset the valuators right before the single smooth scroll
event we get is delivered)
So, only reset scroll valuators when the pointer enters the toplevel
(we only care about this when the pointer is on the window after it's
been possibly scrolling somewhere else), and it doesn't come from an
inferior.
The situations where this happened varied though, the native subwindow
could be one created explicitly by the application, or created indirectly
through gdk_window_ensure_native(). The latter was mainly the case for
evolution (through gtk_selection_set_owner()) and any GtkScrolledWindow
under the oxygen-gtk3 theme (through gdk_window_set_composited())
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=699574
Add a GtkSetting for whether the desktop shell is showing the desktop
folder icons.
This is on by default because most desktop shells do show the icons on
the desktop. We already have a patch in gnome-settings-daemon to bind
this to the org.gnome.desktop.background show-desktop-icons GSettings
key which is off by default on GNOME.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=712302
If a motion event handler (or other handler running from the flush-events
phase of the frame clock) recursed the main loop then flushing wouldn't
complete until after the recursed main loop returned, and various aspects
of the state would get out of sync.
To fix this, change flushing of the event queue to simply mark events as
ready to flush, and let normal event delivery handle the rest.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=705176
I have been convinced that it is a bad idea to change the behaviour
at the same time as deprecating it, so go back to respecting the
Gtk/ButtonImages xsetting in buttons created with
gtk_button_new_from_stock() when it is set.
The setting as well as the function are still deprecated, and the
default value of the setting will remain FALSE.
I have been convinced that it is a bad idea to change the behaviour
at the same time as deprecating it, so go back to respecting the
Gtk/MenuImages xsetting in GtkImageMenuItem when it is set.
The setting as well as the widget are still deprecated, and the
default value of the setting will remain FALSE.
Pass the master device instead if the last slave is NULL. This is
unlikely to happen in most of the cases, but can happen when running
unit tests where there's no pointer interaction to update the last
slave.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=696756
This lets you force a specific window scale, this is needed
for mutter to be able to disable the scaling as it needs access
to unmangled X window/screen sizes. It can also be useful to
force a specific scale in e.g. tests.
This reverts commit b2e666bf8f.
We need to keep cursor blinking configurable for accessibility
reasons.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=704134
Conflicts:
gdk/win32/gdkproperty-win32.c
gdk/x11/gdksettings.c
gtk/gtksettings.c
gtk/gtktextview.c
We want a surface so we can properly represent the scale factor for it.
All backends are converted to use surfaces and we reimplement the
backwards compat code in the generic code.
Xsun is no longer shipped to customers, and Oracle/Sun's Xorg distribution
uses "Sun Microsystems" as the vendor name, so this hack is incorrect in
the more common recent cases.
Plug windows weren't redrawing properly because the embedded
window was expecting to get messages for each frame from the
compositor, but the compositor doesn't know about embedded
windows. Simply disable frame sync for GtkPlug's GdkWindow -
extending XEMBED to handle frame sync isn't interesting
at this point.
A new API gdk_x11_window_set_frame_sync_enabled() is added
to allow this to be done.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=701613
We've long had double precision mouse coordinates on wayland (e.g.
when rotating a window) but with the new scaling we even have it on
X (and, its also in Xinput2), so convert all the internal mouse/device
position getters to use doubles and add new accessors for the
public APIs that take doubles instead of ints.
This lets use use a scaled Xft/DPI for old apps while not
blowing up the size of scaled windows. Only apps supporting
Gdk/WindowScaleFactor should supprt Gdk/UnscaledDPI.
If you set GDK_SCALE=2 in the environment then all windows will be
scaled by 2. Its not an ideal solution as it doesn't handle
multi-monitors at different scales, and only affects gtk apps.
But it is a good starting points and will help a lot on HiDPI
laptops.
Move the call to gdk_x11_atom_to_xatom_for_display() outside of the
search loop in gdk_x11_screen_supports_net_wm_hint(). In my test case
(running Audacious for about a minute), this reduced the total number of
hash table lookups performed from 370,000 to 230,000.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=702913
Calling XIQueryPointer() on a slave device is going to trigger a
BadDevice X error. So in case we query a slave device state, ask the
master device instead.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=700233
Add missing check in gdk_x11_device_manager_xi2_get_window(), returning
NULL if no valid XI2Event* has been found. Calling code seems to be
prepared to handle NULLs coming from this function, so it should be
safe enough (e.g. check gdk_event_source_get_filter_window()).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=700465
Change the visibility handling to be the same way we do it in
GLib now. We pass -fvisibility=hidden to gcc and decorate public
functions with __attribute__((visibility("default"))).
This commit just does this for GDK, GTK+ will follow later.
Move it from GdkDisplayManagerX11.init to GdkDisplay.class_init.
This shouldn't cause any problems, but who knows, so keep this patch
small.
Reason for this is the unification of display managers.
This makes Wayland and X11 no longer call into XKB and libX11 for these
functions but use GDK's own copy of these functions, just like the
win32, quartz and broadway backends.
This is another step towards making GdkDisplayManager backend-agnostic.
Most of the backends profit from this as their atom implementations
where generic anyway - x11 needed that to allow multiple X displays and
broadway, quartz and wayland don't have the concept of displays.
The X11 backend still did things, so I only #if 0'd some code but did
not actually update anything.
On crossing events resulting from moving windows (eg. workspace switch),
deviceid equals sourceid, so make those reset scroll valuators on all
slave devices to avoid misleading jumps in scroll events
Fixes https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=690275
The macros we had for checking for toplevel windows were passing
through the root window, which was not intentional and meant that
for the root window WINDOW_IS_TOPLEVEL() returned TRUE but
window->impl->toplevel was NULL, causing gdk_window_create_cairo_surface()
to crash.
* remove gdk_frame_clock_get_frame_time_val(); a convenience
function that would rarely be used.
* remove gdk_frame_clock_get_requested() and
::frame-requested signal; while we might want to eventually
be able to track the requested phases for a clock, we don't
have a current use case.
* Make gdk_frame_clock_freeze/thaw() private: they are only
used within GTK+ and have complex semantics.
* Remove gdk_frame_clock_get_last_complete(). Another convenience
function that I don't have a current use case for.
* Rename:
gdk_frame_clock_get_start() => gdk_frame_clock_get_history_start()
gdk_frame_clocK_get_current_frame_timings() => gdk_frame_clock_get_timings()
Since we're not exporting the ability to create your own frame
clock for now, remove the setters for GdkFrameTimings fields.
Also remove all setters and getters for fields that are more
about implementation than about quantities that are meaningful
to the applcation and just access the fields directly within
GDK.
Now that GdkFrameClock is a class, not interface, there's no real advantage
to splitting the frame history into an aggregate object, so directly
merge it into GdkFrameClock.
Instead of making the frame clock a settable property of a window, make
toplevel windows inherently have a frame clock when created (getting
rid of the default frame clock.) We need to create or destroy frame
clocks when reparenting a window to be a toplevel, or to not be a
toplevel, but otherwise the frame clock for a window is immutable.
If we get a focus event for a X window we don't recognize, just
ignore it and avoid a g-critical when
_gdk_device_manager_core_handle_focus() is called with a NULL window.
Deprecate gdk_window_enable_synchronized_configure() and
gdk_window_configure_done() and make them no-ops. Implement the
handling of _NET_WM_SYNC_REQUEST in terms of the frame cycle -
we know that all processing will be finished in the next frame
cycle after the ConfigureNotify is received.
For an operation like synchronizing audio to video playback, we need to
be able to predict the time that a frame will be presented. The details
of this depend on the windowing system, so make the backend predict
a presentation time for ::begin-frame and set it on the GdkFrameTimings.
The timing algorithm of GdkFrameClockIdle is adjusted to give predictable
presentation times for frames that are not throttled by the windowing
system.
Helper functions:
gdk_frame_clock_get_current_frame_timings()
gdk_frame_clock_get_refresh_info()
are added for operations that would otherwise be needed multiple times
in different locations.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=685460
We want the compositor to do different things for frames where
"slept before" is TRUE. Communicate to the compositor that
frame is a no-delay frame (slept_before=FALSE) by ending the frame
by increasing the counter value by 1, and that the frame is a
normal frame (slept_before=TRUE) by increasing the counter value
by 3.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=685460
In order to be able to track statistics about how well we are drawing,
and in order to be able to do sophisticated things with frame timing
like predicting per-frame latencies and synchronizing audio with video,
we need to be able to track exactly when previous frames were drawn
to the screen.
Information about each frame is stored in a new GdkFrameTimings object.
A new GdkFrameHistory object is added which keeps a queue of recent
GdkFrameTimings (this is added to avoid further complicating the
implementation of GdkFrameClock.)
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=685460
Instead of communicating the start of a frame to the window manager
as soon as we begin a frame, start a frame only when we know we've
actually created damage to the contents of a window.
(This uses cairo_set_mime_data() as a notification mechanism - a
clever suggestion from Uli Schlachter.)
The advantage of this is that we aren't forcing the compositor to
do a frame cycle and send _NET_WM_FRAME_DRAWN - depending on how the
compositor is structured that might either cause it to do extra
work or it might send _NET_WM_FRAME_DRAWN early and upset frame
timing.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=685460
Unqueuing events from the windowing system when paused could result
in weird reordering if event filters resulted in application-visible
behavior. Since we now resume events when the frame clock is frozen,
we now no longer count on low-level event handling running while
event handling is paused.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=685460
By starting with an odd frame counter value, we make the mapping
and initial paint of the window an atomic operation, avoiding
any visual artifacts from an unpainted window.
Possible improvement: start the frame when doing gdk_window_show(),
so that the same improvement occurs for windows that were previously
shown and are being mapped again.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=685460
When a window is unmapped, freeze its frame clock. This avoids doing
unnecessary work, but also means that we won't block waiting for
_NET_WM_FRAME_DRAWN messages that will never be received since the
frame ended while the window was withdrawn.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=685460
As part of the extended _NET_WM_SYNC_REQUEST_COUNTER protocol,
we get a _NET_WM_FRAME_DRAWN message for each frame we draw. Use this
to synchronize the updates we are doing with the compositing manager's
drawing, and ultimately with with display refresh.
We now set the sync request counters on all windows, including
override-redirect windows, since it is also useful to do synchronized,
atomic updates for such windows.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=685460
By exporting two XSync counters on a toplevel window, we subscribe
to an extended form of the _NET_WM_SYNC_REQUEST_COUNTER protocol,
where the window manager can initiate an atomic frame, as previously,
but the application can also do so by incrementing the new counter to
an odd value, and then to an even value to finish the frame.
See:
https://mail.gnome.org/archives/wm-spec-list/2011-October/msg00006.html
The support for 64-bit integers that GLib requires is used to
simplify the logic.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=685460
Add the ability to freeze a frame clock, which pauses its operation,
then thaw it again later to resume.
Initially this is used to implement freezing updates when we are
waiting for ConfigureNotify in response to changing the size of
a toplevel.
We need a per-window clock for this to work properly, so add that
for the X11 backend.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=685460
We may receive events because SubstructureNotifyMask has been selected
for the root window. (Most likely, this would occur because GTK+
is being used inside a window manager like Metacity or Mutter.)
This can confuse various types of internal accounting, so detect
such events and comprehensively ignore them for GDK's internal
purposes. We still need to generate GDK events for these cases
because you can select for substructure events with
GDK_SUBSTRUCTURE_MASK.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=685460
Since XIQueryVersion, the bad API that it is, enforces the version from
the first client that requests it, for clients to be able to use the new
features in XI2.3, we need to ensure that we pass XIQueryVersion 2.3 as
the version that we support. We know that GTK+ won't be confused by the
new features.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=692467
The X server should fill in the minor version that it supports in the
case where it only supports the older version, so we can safely always
pass a higher version number than is potentially supported by the
server.
libXi was designed to be stable in the case where it doesn't recognize
requests or events/replies, so this should still work in a case where
we have new versions of the X server, and GTK+, but an old version of
libXi, at least for however well that setup should work.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=692467
Before acting on any hint that is set by the window manager we must
first check that the hint is supported by the current window manager.
Checking that a property has a value is insufficient as it may have
been set by a previous window manager which did support the hint.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=691515
This avoids a case where the display has been opened, but calling
gdk_display_get_default() in the callback doesn't work.
Reviewed-by: Benjamin Otte <otte@redhat.com>
By calling XSync in _gdk_x11_display_after_process_all_updates we
effectively make gdk rendering sync, which avoids problems with the
client animations running faster than the Xserver rendering, thus
filling up the X rendering pipes and essentially "locking up" the
Xserver (i.e. you can't even close the offending window because the
WM is starved too).
I verified this worked by making GtkSpinner paint multiple times on my
intel driver (which has some issue making this rendering slow atm),
and without this patch i get severe lag where even window dragging
stops for 5 seconds when i drag the mouse around. However, with the
patch everything is smooth.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=684639
After my recent fix for this, nautilus was still having problems
telling keeping F10 and Shift-F10 apart. With this change, we are
treating levels with the same symbol like inactive levels, ignoring
them entirely.
A change in xkeyboard-config 2.4.1 made it so that function keys
now have a shift level which has the same symbol, but 'eats' the
shift modifier. This would ordinarily make it impossible for us
to discriminate between these key combinations.
This commit tries harder to discriminate in 2 ways:
- XKB has a mechanism to tell us when a modifier should not be
consumed even though it was used in determining the level.
We now respect such 'preserved' modifiers. This does not fix
the Shift-F10 vs F10 problem yet, since xkeyboard-config does
not currently mark Shift as preserved for function keys.
- Don't consume modifiers that do not change the symbol. For
the function keys, the symbol on the shift level is the same
as the base level, so we don't consider Shift consumed.
For more background on the xkeyboard-config change, see
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=45008https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=661973
This was showing up when using a combo box in list mode. After popping
up the list, the keyboard grab appeared stuck. What was stuck here is
only the client-side grab, since we forgot to clean up our grabs
when receiving an UnmapNotify.
This bug was introduced in 1c97003664.
GtkPlug directly handles X KeyPress/Release events, instead of using
translation in GDK (which expects XI2 events for XI2). When this
was done, the handling of the group was stubbed out and never replaced.
Export gdk_keymap_x11_group_for_state() and gdk_keymap_x11_is_modifier()
so we can fill out the fields correctly.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=675167
Since the event will be ignored anyway after it's translated (slave
devices are disabled), don't let it run in the smooth scroll code path,
as it will burn our caches for the actual event we're interested in.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=673644
_gdk_x11_moveresize_configure_done() isn't called for wmspec
moves/resizes so we don't have a way to notice when a wmspec
move/resize ends and consequently untrigger the sending of
_NET_WM_MOVERESIZE_CANCEL which results in this message always being
sent on the next button release event. In that case we are marking
that event as handled so it isn't processed further which breaks
button press/release event handling in several widgets.
To fix this we simply allow the normal event handling machinery to run
after sending the _NET_WM_MOVERESIZE_CANCEL message.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=673328
Since the order in which _NET_WM_STATE and _NET_WM_DESKTOP are set, or
even *if* they are set, isn't defined, we could end up unsetting
GDK_WINDOW_STATE_FOCUSED given that both handlers for these two X
properties end up doing window state changes for all states. As we
want GDK_WINDOW_STATE_FOCUSED to be set by default we need to set its
master flag by default as well.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=673125
The code for calculating the per-monitor workarea was ignoring
the fact that the EWMH workarea property can only handle rectangular
workareas, and thus can't really do justice to general monitor
arrangements. As a workaround, we ignore it for anything but
the primary monitor. And we ignore it for the primary monitor
as well if it does not even cover it.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=672163
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.
This patch reapplies db4a6040af which was
backed out in 18406b7b04 to give
developers a chance to get their X servers fixed. As we want to get this
bugfix in for 3.4, we need to commit it now.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=657578
XI2 provides us with an increment for each scroll valuator,
and by dividing the delta by the increment, we obtain normalized
values in some abstract 'scroll unit'.
For mouse wheels, the evdev driver reports an increment of -1,
so doing this division fixes the inverted scrolling with wheels
that we've seen recently.
If the Window Manager supports the _NET_WM_STATE_HIDDEN, we use it to use
the _NET_WM_STATE protocol when de-iconifying windows (iconification is
unchanged, via XIconifyWindow). Additionally, we no longer interpret all
UnmapNotify events for our window as the result of iconification.
(Based on patch by Tomas Frydrych <tf@linux.intel.com>)
XInput >= 2.1 allows for implementing smooth scrolling,
reporting the different scrolling axes as valuators.
Any change in those will be reported as GdkEventScroll
events with delta_x/y information.
the older kind of scroll events is still handled, and
emulated in devices able to provide smooth scrolling,
setting _gdk_event_set_pointer_emulated() in that case.
Translate XI_TouchBegin/Update/End to GDK_TOUCH_BEGIN/UPDATE/END
events.
At the same time,
set pointer-emulated flags on button events with XIPointerEmulated
and on touch events emulating the pointer.
This patch changes all uses of GDK_DEPRECATED(_FOR) in gdk headers
by the versioned variants, GDK_DEPRECATED_IN_3_x(_FOR). At the same
time, we add GDK_AVAILABLE_IN_3_x annotations for all API additions
in 3.2 and 3.4.
This last slave device (stored per master) is used to fill
in the missing slave device in synthesized crossing events
that are not directly caused by a device event (ie due to
configure events or grabs).
Move g_return_if_fail() stuff from the backends to the public
functions in gdkscreen.c itself, and some fixes for ugly formatting in
the various gdkscreen-backend.c files.
_gdk_x11_keymap_key_is_modifier() never tries to set min/max_keycode
if they haven't been set before, meaning that until another function
sets those, all the keys will be seen as non-modifiers.
This causes GdkKeyEvents to be wrongly tagged with "->is_modifier = 0"
when in actual fact the key is a modifier. This fixes keyboard
shortcuts captured with GtkCellRendererAccel in "raw" mode thinking
a modifier without any actual keys is a valid shortcut.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=670400
This implements the following part of the EWMH spec:
"The special value _NET_WM_MOVERESIZE_CANCEL also allows clients to cancel the
operation by sending such message if they detect the release themselves
(clients should send it if they get the button release after sending the move
resize message, indicating that the WM did not get a grab in time to get the
release)."
In particular, it fixes the case of clicking widgets that use
gdk_window_begin_[resize|move]_drag*() and the click "sticking", i.e. the
mouse button getting released but the resize or move operation remaining in
effect.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=669208
"The child window MUST also have the _NET_SUPPORTING_WM_CHECK property set to
the ID of the child window. […] If the _NET_SUPPORTING_WM_CHECK window on the
client window is missing or not properly set, clients SHOULD assume that no
conforming Window Manager is present."
This commit implements that, which allows us to not have to do a
XGetWindowProperty() every N seconds when running under a compliant WM.
This is also a more correct fix for the bug handled in commit
daf29bffed.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=666921
The part in gdkwindow-x11.c which uses XIEvent and friends is "protected"
by HAVE_XGENERICEVENTS, i.e., XGetEventData() has been found. (Xlib.h)
XIEvent and friends are defined in <X11/extension/XInput2.h> which is
included by gdkdisplay-x11.h if XINPUT_2 is defined.
The patch makes sure XIEvent is only used if XINPUT_2 is defined.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=667534
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
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.
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
Add GDK_MODIFIER_INTENT_SHIFT_GROUP to enum GdkModifierIntent
and handle it in gdk_keymap_get_modifier_mask(). Add an X11
impl of the method and return keymap_x11->group_switch_mask.
Return 0 from the default impl because we don't know.
_NET_WM_STATE_FOCUSED is a new _NET_WM_STATE hint which allows us to
implement a meaningful GDK_WINDOW_STATE_FOCUSED under X11. If the window
manager doesn't support this hint we keep GDK_WINDOW_STATE_FOCUSED set since
that is what gtk+ implicitly assumed historically.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=661428
which effectively nails down the MOD1 == ALT assumption that is valid
in all other parts of GTK+. After the modifier abstraction fixes for
OSX, the virtual mapping is now (correctly) used in more places, and
caused problems with the common default PC keyboard layout on X11 that
colocates ALT and META on the same key.
Since the wmspec_check_window doesn't have a corresponding GdkWindow we can't
rely on the get_event_window() return value to get the XID from. Just use the
XID from the XEvent directly.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=662953
After consulting with Carlos, we agreed that it should be enough to grab
the core pointer instead of doing a full grab. If it turns out that's
wrong, we need to adapt the internal API for resizes to take the device
doing the resize.
In 2.x, the !HAVE_XCONVERTCASE fallback of keyval_convert_case() was
implicitly used as implementation for all !X11 backends.
In 3.x, when this function was virtualized in GdkDisplayManager,
this fallback was moved to the X11 backend and the other backends
"equipped" with /* FIXME implement */ implementations of
keyval_convert_case() which don't convert anything.
Move the fallback code back to gdk/ as default implementation
of GdkDisplayManager::keyval_convert_case() and remove its
implementations is all backends but X11. Also remove the
implementation in Wayland which was a plain copy of what
is now the default implementation.
(cherry picked from commit f46c1b76d8)
Fixes bug #658379 - Disabled devices still added to list on startup,
spotted by Bastien Nocera. Do not create GdkDevices for disabled
devices on device manager construction, leading to a confusing initial
state.