This matches the behaviour of Mutter, Metacity and traditional X11
window managers on the window manager side, and is what we want
for at least gnome-terminal. I can't think of any reason why we'd
want incremental resize in any other tiled window.
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@debian.org>
Bug: https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=760944https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=755947
Only update to using v2 headers/structs. The incompatible changes
to tool events are dealt with in the next commit. Pads aren't handled
in this commit either.
On X11, device_query_state() uses XIQueryPointer() which will return a
child window only if the pointer is within an actual child of the given
window.
Wayland backend would return the pointer->focus window independently of
the given window, but that breaks the logic in get_device_state() and
later in gdk_window_get_device_position_double() because the window is
searched based on coordinates from another window without sibling
relationship, breaking gtkmenu sub-menus further down the line.
Fix the Wayland backend to mimic X11's XIQueryPointer() to return a
child only if really a child of the given window.
That's the most sensible thing to do to fix the issue, but the API here
seems to be modeled after the X11 implementation and the description of
gdk_window_get_device_position_double() is not entirely accurate.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=768016
This has most notably impact in selection buffers, because those were
shared across all selection atoms. This turned out wrong on 2 situations:
- Because the selection atom was set at SelectionBuffer creation time, the
GDK_SELECTION_NOTIFY events generated will have unexpected info if the
buffer is attempted to be reused for another selection.
- Anytime different selections imply different stored content for the same
target.
This is better separated into per-selection buffers, so it's not possible
to get collisions if a same target is used across different selections.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=768177
The sanitize_utf8() function has been copied from X11 so both
backends behave the same. This allows interaction with older clients
(mainly through Xwayland, and the STRING selection target) that
request non-utf8 text.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=768082
Debian stable currently ships with a 3.16 kernel, so
it doesn't have memfd available.
This commit adds shm_open fall back code for that case
(for now).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=766341
We currently use syscall() directly to invoke memfd_create,
since the function isn't available in libc headers yet.
The code, though, mishandles how errors are passed from syscall().
It assumes syscall returns the error code directly (but negative),
when in fact, syscall() uses errno.
Also, the code fails to retry on EINTR.
This commit moves the handling of memfd create to a helper function,
and changes the code to use errno and handle EINTR.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=766341
A wl_buffer has a max size of 4096 bytes, of which 8 are needed for the
header and another 4 for the string argument length (in this case), so
make sure the we only save the first 4083 bytes that are still valid
UTF8.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=767241
xdg-shell allows desktop environments to extend the list of states
within a given range.
Use this possibility to add a new state for tiled so that gtk+ can
benefit from this.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=766860
The Wayland protocol does not share XI2's wealth of information
about individual devices, but it does provide discriminating
information about the source for scroll events. Pass this on to
the application by creating separate slave devices for these,
and setting them as source device on the scroll events.
These devices can be discriminated by their input-source property:
wheel - GDK_SOURCE_MOUSE
finger - GDK_SOURCE_TOUCHPAD
continuous - GDK_SOURCE_TRACKPOINT
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=767093
fix up
Given that Wayland has no global coordinate, the only way for gdk to
retrieve the monitor a window last entered is to retrieve it from the
GdkWaylandWindow itself.
Implement the backend specific get_monitor_at_window() to return the
monitor that was last entered by the window.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=766566
In Wayland, surfaces get an enter/leave notification each time they
enter or leave an output.
Add an API to GdkWaylandWindow to retrieve the output the window has
last entered.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=766566
Only generate crossing events on wl_touch.down for the virtual master
device used for touch events, and only whenever this virtual device
actually moves across surfaces. This behavior resembles better what is
expected in X11, where the pointer is warped to the touch position
on XITouchBegin.
This avoids the double emission of leave events when the pointer
emulating touch is lifted, that crossing event will be instead
generated when/if the focus surface changes.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=766314
This is required for proper integration with any other library/application that
may perform wayland API calls and poll() the wayland fd from multiple threads.
Using wl_display_dispatch{_queue}() is thread-safe if not mixed with custom
poll() usage, which GSource/GMainContext does.
Essentially, the problem is that multiple threads polling and reading
the same fd is extremely racy. Use the wayland provided API for allowing
concurrent access to the wayland display fd.
See the wayland man pages for wl_display_prepare_read(),
wl_display_cancel_read() and wl_display_read_events() for more details.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=763852
Use of g_signal_handlers_disconnect_by_func() needs to do more work than
necessary to find all the matching handlers. Instead, just hold on to the
signal identifier and remove it directly so we hit the fast path.
Not terribly ground breaking in terms of performance gains, but its done
enough to be worthwhile.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=766049
The wayland specification for discrete step information for scroll and
other axes reads:
| The discrete value carries the directional information. e.g. a
| value of -2 is two steps towards the negative direction of this axis.
mutter sets a value of 1 for SCROLL_DOWN events and -1 for SCROLL_UP
events.
gdkdevice Wayland backend does the opposite, it translates a positive
discrete value as SCROLL_UP and a negative value as SCROLL_DOWN, which
ends up inverting the scrolling direction.
Fix the logic in gdkdevice Wayland to use a positive value as
SCROLL_DOWN and a negative value as SCROLL_UP so that it matches mutter
and weston logic.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=765907
NoSymbol is not a valid GDK symbol (it only has the concept of
VoidSymbol, for some reason, which is neither the same thing nor
produced by any sane keymap). Passing NoSymbol events through to GTK+
apps is unlikely to produce anything useful.
In particular, this meant VTE would scroll to the end of the buffer when
pressing Fn (required for Page Up/Down on Macs), as it was receiving a
keypress that wasn't a modifeir. This does not happen on X11, as the
KEY_FN keycode is above 255, so does not get sent to clients.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=764825
We don't care about the specific (possibly client-side) window that
requested the focus here, only the toplevel. Fixes mistakenly sent
focus events when the grab happens inside the current focus window.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=762756
Always associate a drag context with a GdkDisplay and use that when
getting a cursor for a given action.
If we don't do this, dragging on a window that doesn't use the default
display will make us use cursors from the wrong display.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=765565
Don't track all orphaned dialogs globally, as mixing them up with each
other would in most cases trigger errors when we try to pass bogus
values to Wayland requests.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=765474
The naming of pointers to GdkWaylandDisplay's were inconsistent.
Running the following commands in gtk+/gdk/wayland illustrate the
inconsistency:
$ grep -r '\<display_wayland\>' *.[ch] | wc -l
195
$ grep -r '\<wayland_display\>' *.[ch] | wc -l
81
This patch renames all occurrences of "wayland_display" to
"display_wayland". This is also consistent with naming in the X11
backend. A couple of whitespace changes were done as well in places
where the rename was already done, that added line breaks to long lines
that stood out.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=765474
When synthesizing keyboard repeat, we can potentially drift further from
the mark depending on the timing of the frame callback and how long it
took to deliver the event.
This patch attempts to reduce this by tracking from a stable epoch the
time of our next keyboard repeat.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=765567
Windows save in hardware_keycode an information which is not so low
level and some application require the hardware scancode.
As Windows provides this information save it in GdkEventPrivate
and provide a function to get this information.
For no Windows system the function return the hardware_keycode instead.
Signed-off-by: Frediano Ziglio <fziglio@redhat.com>
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=765259
If we get gdk_wayland_seat_flush_frame_event() with no previous event to be
flushed, we fallback into the scroll event checks. However, there's no check
performed there as to whether it really scrolled, so it'd always send a smooth
scroll event with 0/0 deltas in this case.
This should be mostly harmless, but still, we should only end up emitting scroll
events if those really happened.
The frame event is also meant to compress wl_pointer.leave events, at this
point the focus surface will be definitely NULL. In the end, wl_pointer.frame
should flush the last composed event despite the pointer focus.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=765065
Since Wayland is using libxkbcommon, it inherits X unfortunate
real/virtual modifier distinction, so we have to do the same
gymnastics we do for X to map between the two.
This should fix matching of accelerators using virtual modifiers
(modulo gnome-shell bugs regarding the handling of Super).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=764424
On wayland, such axes are per-tool, we must update device capabilities
on the fly as new tools enter proximity, first the slave device so
it matches the current tool, and then the master device so it looks
the same than the current slave device.
Only the management of tablets and tools is added so far. No tablet events
are yet interpreted.
As it's been the tradition in GTK+, erasers are split into their own device,
whereas the rest of the tools are meant to be routed through the
GDK_SOURCE_PEN device. Both pen/eraser devices are slaves to a master
pointer device, separate to wl_pointer's. This is so each tablet can
maintain its own cursor/positioning accounting.
Signed-off-by: Stephen Chandler Paul <thatslyude@gmail.com>
This will enable multiple "pointers" to have separate data here.
Will come out useful when adding support for tablets, as they
will have a separate cursor for all purposes.
gnome-control-center is calling gtk_window_resize() on configure-event
signals which leads to a busy loop.
Avoids such a busy loop by not re-configuring a window with the same
size, unless this is coming from and xdg-shell configure.
bugzilla: https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=764374
If the configure-event gives us the same size as we had before,
which is common for animation resizes, then try to keep the
existing buffer around. This saves us a memfd_create() syscall
on every frame.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=763350
Now that GdkWaylandDeviceData is gone, the functions prefixed
"gdk_wayland_device_" and taking a GdkWaylandSeat as first
parameter feel out of place. Renaming those makes it more obvious
that it's seat functions.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=763859
It's the same than gdk_device_get_seat() nowadays. Also, rename the
usages of GdkWaylandDeviceData to GdkWaylandSeat in the functions
affected by the removal.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=763859
We were just relying on the drag context finalize() to destroy
the window. But with garbage-collected bindings, that might
not happen as soon as we like, so explicitly hide the window
when the drag ends successfully.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=763659
The way gdk_drag_status() may be called multiple times during the
processing of drag and drop events throughout the widget hierarchy
brings some superfluous messaging going in, esp. when it's the last
request the one we want to honor, yet we emit messaging requests on
all.
This is barely appreciable in the X11 backend, but due to the design
of the wayland protocol, quick series of changes like this it have
some self-amplificating consequences which may end up flooding the
connection.
We can delegate this to a late "commit" call, performed within GDK
event management. This way gdk_drag_status() calls may be cached
and only result in windowing messaging once per ::drag-motion or
::drag-data-received event. Emitting the final status will also
avoid spurious action changes on the compositor and the other peer.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=763298
A gtk_surface.present request was added to gtk_surface which takes
timestamp from some input event, and uses that timestamp to figure out
whether the window can be presented or not. If we don't have a
timestamp, we should just give up instead of making up our own,
otherwise we might steal someones focus.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=763037
The gtk_shell protocol used some half baked unstable protocol semantics
that worked by only allowing binding the exact version of the
interface. This hack is a bit too confusing and it makes it impossible
to do any compatible changes without breaking things.
So, instead rename it to include a number in the interface names. This
way we can add requests and events without causing compatibility issues,
and we can later remove requests and events by bumping the number in
the interface names.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=763001
This request actually means nothing to the upper GDK layers,
we used to preempt a GDK_SELECTION_REQUEST event, but this is too
eager, and not like things work in X11.
Originally in wayland, this event may be used for feedback purposes.
We however don't perform any mimetype-based feedback, so we can
safely ignored.
This makes data_source_send() the only place where we actually
trigger GDK_SELECTION_REQUEST, this one is conceptually the same
than the X11 selection request event.
The default value for the double-click key in the
org.gnome.settings-daemon.peripherals.mouse schema is 400.
Use the same value as the declared default for the
gtk-double-click-time GTK+ setting, to avoid pointless
differences in corner cases.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=720950
Use gdk_window_get_effective_toplevel when looking for
a suitable transient parent, to skip over offscreen windows
that we might encounter in the window tree. This fixes
a crash in glade.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=763110
key repeat is handled client side, which means stalls in the compositor
dispatching key release events can lead to fictious repeat events.
This commit ties key repeat to a server roundtrip to ensure the client
and server are in sync.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=757942
We don't need the key repeat rate or anything like that when
handling key up events, so do key up events first before querying
for that information.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=757942
deliver_key_event is sometimes called from a timeout handler and
sometimes called directly. We currently erroneously return TRUE
(G_SOURCE_CONTINUE) in the case where it's called directly, but to
no ill effect, since we ignore that return value. In the future,
we're going to need to call it directly in other parts of the code
where the return value would be relevant and handling TRUE, would
require adding redundant code.
Instead, this commit just changes the code to always reset the timer
manually, and never rely on glib's ability to automatically reset
the timer by returning TRUE. This makes the code smaller, too, since
there's less special casing required.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=757942
If the parent of a transient is not a native Wayland window (e.g.
offscreen window), the transient loop check will crash.
Check for the actual type in the transient loop check and do not assume
the parent is necessarily Wayland native.
bugzilla: https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=761156
Signed-off-by: Olivier Fourdan <ofourdan@redhat.com>
According to xdg_shell, an xdg_surface.configure with size 0x0 should
be interpreted as that it is up to the client to set a size.
When transitioning from maximize or fullscreen state, this means the
client should configure its size back to what it was before being
maximize or fullscreen.
This problem currently only occurs on weston because weston sends a
configure with size 0x0 when transitioning back from maximize or
fullscreen.
bugzilla: https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=762713
gdk_display_list_devices is deprecated and all the backends
implement the same fallback by delegating to the device manager
and caching the list (caching it is needed since the method does
not transfer ownership of the container).
The compat code can be shared among all backends and we can
initialize the list lazily only in the case someone calls the
deprecated method.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=762891
The staging buffer gets allocated any time begin_paint is called
on the window. This can happen even with an empty paint region,
so we should cope with that situation. At the moment we crash
trying to post a runtime warning.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=762755
The g_print documentation explicitly says not to do this, since
g_print is meant to be redirected by applications. Instead use
g_message for logging that can be triggered via GTK_DEBUG.
The gdkprivate-wayland.h header file is included from the top-level gdk
directory; this means that all included files referenced in the header
must be relative to the `gdk` directory, otherwise the build will fail
when the build directory is not equal to the source directory.
This commit fixes a build failure under continuous:
In file included from ../../gdk/gdkdisplaymanager.c:60:0:
../../gdk/wayland/gdkprivate-wayland.h:40:51: fatal error:
gtk-primary-selection-client-protocol.h: No such file or directory
#include "gtk-primary-selection-client-protocol.h"
^
compilation terminated.
Makefile:1155: recipe for target 'libgdk_3_la-gdkdisplaymanager.lo' failed
make[4]: *** [libgdk_3_la-gdkdisplaymanager.lo] Error 1
I am testing GTK+ master against mutter 3.19.90, so I'd
like GTK+ to survive even when the compositor does not
support the primary selection interface.
Implement it using the internal copy of the protocol. Otherwise,
we just deal with it the same than clipboard selection, just mapping
it to the PRIMARY atom instead of the CLIPBOARD one.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=762561
This protocol is an internal mirror of the primary selection drafts
being proposed for wayland-protocols. No changes besides prefix/suffix
changes.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=762561
Add a gtk_shell.set_startup_id request, so the application can communicate
to the compositor the startup id that it received through the
DESKTOP_STARTUP_ID envvar, or other means.
When running with a Wayland compositor which doesn't support the
xdg_shell interface, gtk+ will segfault while trying to access the
corresponding wl proxy.
Check for xdg_shell support and do not use Wayland if not present, so
that it can fallback to X11, hoping that Xwayland is usable.
Bugzilla: https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=762258
There is no point in attaching and then committing the same buffer if
there was no damage. This will also make us do less unnecessary backfill
read backs, for the cases where we paint with an empty paint region.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=762120
If a after-paint was scheduled but nothing was painted, for example when
the it was scheduled by a subsurface wanting to update its position,
we'd still try to read back from the backfill cairo surface and update
the committed cairo surface reference even though no buffer was
attached.
Fix this by adding a new state, 'pending_buffer_attached', which is only
true if a buffer was attached during frame. Only when this is true will
the backfill be read back and the committed cairo surface reference be
updated.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=762120
We should conform to a minimal set of reasons for the gtk side to emit
a better GtkDragResult than GTK_DRAG_RESULT_ERROR. This fixes the notebook
tab DnD feature, where we rely on GTK_DRAG_RESULT_NO_TARGET.
In the wayland side, unfortunately we can't honor either NO_TARGET nor
USER_CANCELLED, we don't know of the latter, so we could return false
positives on the former.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=761954
Right now we use one buffer for both staged changes (freshly painted
changes waiting for the frame clock to send to the compositor) and
committed changes (changes actively being read by the compositor
process). This creates a problem in the event we need to stage updates
at the same time the compositor is processing committed updates: we
can't change what the compositor is actively processing.
The current solution for handling this contention is to allocate a
temporary buffer on the spot at the time the updates are staged, and to
copy that buffer back to the shared buffer later. The problem, though,
is that the copy to the shared buffer currently happens as soon as
the updates are finished being staged, not when the shared buffer is
done being processed by the compositor.
In order to address that problem, this commit changes the code to always
stage changes to a dedicated staging buffer. The staging buffer is
used exclusively by the client until the client is done with it, and then
once that staging buffer is committed, the client never writes to that
buffer again. If the client needs to stage new updates, it allocates a
brand new staging buffer, draws to it, and back fills the undrawn parts
of the buffer from a copy of the contents of the committed buffer.
As an optimization, the compositor has the option of releasing the
committed buffer back to the client. If it does so before the client
needs to stage new updates, then the client will reuse the buffer
for staging future updates. This optimization prevents having to allocate
a new staging buffer and the associated cost of back filling
that new buffer with a readback of the committed buffer.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=761312
Right now we handle buffer releases coming from the
compositor in a central place. We add a listener when
first creating the shared buffers.
This is problematic because a buffer can only have
one listener on it at once so users of the buffer
can't get notified when it's released.
This commit moves the buffer listener code from the
centrally managed display code to the cursor and window
code.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=761312
The client and compositor share access to the window
pixel buffers. After the client hands off (commits)
the buffer to the compositor it's not supposed to write
to it again until it's released by the compositor.
The code tries to deal with this contention by allocating
a temporary buffer and using that in the mean time. This
temporary buffer is allocated by a higher layer of the code
when begin_paint returns TRUE. Unfortunately, that layer of
the code has no idea when the buffer is released, so it ends
up blitting the temporary buffer back to the shared buffer
prematurely.
This commit changes begin_paint to always return FALSE.
A future commit will address the contention problem in
a different way.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=761312
There are a few places where we destroy a cairo surface and
then nullify it. This commit changes those to use
g_clear_pointer instead.
It also drops a cairo_surface_finish call that is unnecessary
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=761312
The name surface is really overloaded when dealing
with wayland windows.
To alleviate ambiguity, this commit changes the name
of the "surface" and "subsurface" members to have
a wl_ prefix.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=761312
Temp windows without parent are used frequently in our testsuite;
using g_warning on them causes the tests to fail, which is not
useful. Reduce the warning to a g_message.
It looks like the gnome-continuous headers haven't quite
caught up yet, so try __NR_memfd_create instead.
If that doesn't work, i'll likely just add in a fallback
code path.
The tmpdir is used for a wide assortment of things, and
can easily fill up. If it fills then desktop will start
crashing with SIGBUS errors.
This commit changes the shm pool allocation code, to use
memfd_create, instead, so the shared memory files will
be anonymous and not associated with /tmp
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=761095
create_shm_pool doesn't need the width or height, it just needs
the total size. By passing it in, we're requiring it to redo
stride calculation unnecessarily.
This commit drops the width and height parameters and makes the
function just take the total size directly.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=760897
Right now, we assume the stride for the image surface needs to
be 4 byte aligned. This is, in fact, true, but it's better to
ask cairo for the alignment requirement directly rather than
assume we know the alignment rules.
This commit changes the code to use cairo_format_stride_for_width
to calculate a suitable rowstride for pixman.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=760897
create_shm_pool unlinks the temporary file a little,
too late. It should be unlinked before ftruncate()
is called for two reasons:
1) if ftruncate fails, the file is currently not
getting cleaned up at all
2) in theory, if the file is public some other process
could muck with it
This commit just moves the unlink call a little higher
up.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=760897
If the grab window is destroyed the grab will be implicitly removed,
although we won't get GdkSeat:ungrab called in order to clear our
internal window<->seat relation entirely. Setting a weak ref will
nullify the pointer we keep on the seat to the window, avoiding the
expected crashes.
Due to implicit grabs, we basically can guarantee that the pointer
won't have any buttons pressed at the time of wl_pointer.enter.
Seems like a good place to unset any button modifiers that might
have been left stale by compositor grabs.
And use it to handle kinetic scrolling in the GtkScrolledWindow.
However, dropping the delta check causes the X11-based kinetic
scroll to break since we don't have the stop event here. Correct handling of
xf86-input-libinput-based scroll events is still being discussed.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=756729
This adds support for the new wl_pointer events available in v5.
The wl_pointer.axis_source events can be ignored for the purposes here, the
main reason they exist is so that the combination of axis_source=finger and
axis_stop triggers kinetic scrolling. We don't need to care about the source,
axis_stop is enough for us to tell us when we're scrolling.
The wl_pointer.frame events group events together and is intended as a
mechanism to coalesce events together. This for example allows us to now
send a single GTK scroll event for a diagonal scroll. Previously, the two
wl_pointer.axis events had to be handled separately.
The wl_pointer.axis_discrete event sends mouse wheel clicks where
appropriate, and is translated into up/down/left/right scroll events.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=756729
When a cursor is specified in gdk_seat_grab(), the cursor is reverted as
soon as the pointer enters or leaves another window.
To avoid this issue, store the grab cursor separately, so we force-apply
it in ::set_window_cursor(). Also, unset early the seat info from the
window on gdk_seat_ungrab(), so the next time switch_to_pointer_grab()
happens we end up picking the cursor set for the window underneath the
pointer window.
Based on a patch by Olivier Fourdan <ofourdan@redhat.com>.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=760213
We destroy the widget that is wrapped around the drag window
when the object data on the drag context gets cleared. Destroying
the window before that happens leads to unpleasantries. E.g. we may
try to access the frame clock, which doesn't exist anymore, and
things go downhill from there. So, keep the window alive for
a little longer.
X11 has the notions of "transient for group", and while it's an ICCCM
violation, it's commonly used and documented that a window manager
would treat a window with transient_for set to None to transient for all
windows of its group.
gtk uses this when an application sets a dialog type window but does not
specify an explicit transient.
While this works on X11, there is no such thing as groups in Wayland and
the closest equivalent which is set_parent() in xdg-shell takes only one
parent. This is what is used for modal dialogs.
To get something similar in behavior to what is available on X11, a
solution is to update the parent() of the dialogs without transient when
the active surface changes.
Bugzilla: https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=759161
Quite a few applications use GTK_WINDOW_POPUP to create various
temporary windows and place then on screen. That works fine on X11 but
on Wayland there is no global coordinate system for regular surfaces.
If the application is using a gdk temp window and set a parent with
gtk_window_transient_for(), the gdk wayland backend has all it needs to
create a subsurface that can be placed at will by the application.
Bugzilla: https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=759738
Always returning a left_ptr if we can't find anything better
broke firefox application-specific fallback for missing cursors.
Keep that working by only doing the fallback for the CSS cursor
names, not for things like hashes.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=760141
In most places, we can do with the pointer/keyboard of the default seat
instead of the client pointer. We can also remove some code from
gdk_input_init() because we know for sure there's no floating devices to
care about here.
Gdk Wayland backend walks up the transient windows tree, but does not
check for cycles when doing so.
As a result, if two or more windows are transient to each other, the
Wayland gdk backend will enter an infinite loop.
While this is clearly a bug in the application, gtk+/gdk should be more
robust and handle such errors more gracefully.
To avoid looping infinitely at various point in the code, check for a
possible loop when setting the transient relationship and deny the
request to set a window transient for another if that would create a
loop.
Bugzilla: https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=759299
We no longer need a grabbed seat, instead we'll just use the default
seat if this happens, not without first warning and recommending
gdk_seat_grab() for the operation.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=759309