The is_modifier field is supposed to be set if the key
would act as a modifier, not if any modifiers are currently
active. To fix this, introduce a private
_gdk_wayland_keymap_key_is_modifier function.
At the same time, make the hardware_keycode field in key
events actually contain the hardware keycode, not a copy
of the keyval.
The global_removal argument is the _name_ of the object.
We were comparing it to the _object id_ of the object.
To fix this, store the name at the time the object is bound.
The GDK model for keymaps expects the keymap object to stay
around and emit a ::keys-changed signal. So, do that. This
should make layout changes work, but it remains untested since
weston does not support layout changes at runtime.
At the same time, plug a memory leak where GdkWaylandKeymap
forgot to free its xkb objects in finalize.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=696339
Allows to access Wayland specific window information like wl_surface and
wl_shell_surface.
Add gdk_wayland_window_get_wl_surface for getting the Wayland wl_surface
and gdk_wayland_window_get_wl_shell_surface for getting the Wayland
wl_shell_surface.
This is then logically associated with the input device since each (keyboard)
input device has its own keymap.
Signed-off-by: Rob Bradford <rob@linux.intel.com>
Although GDK expects the keymap to be associated with the display under
Wayland this is really associated with the input device so expose this by
finding the first keyboard device.
Signed-off-by: Rob Bradford <rob@linux.intel.com>
This replaces the wl_input_device with wl_pointer, wl_keyboard, wl_touch all
tied together under a wl_seat.
This is quite a radical change in protocol and for now keyboard handling is
disabled.
This allows us to get the device if we need to make the window a popup. This
relies on the side effect that GTK calls into GDK to take a grab before the
popup window is shown.