Whenever a stacked or tabbed container has focused, paint the titlebars of all
its child windows to be focused as well to indicate the parent stack/tab
container has the focus.
In `move_focus()`, when given an output, set the focus to the workspace of that
output instead of the output itself.
This fixes a bug that did not allow users to switch between outputs introduced
in afc6ad6.
It also fixes other issues before that commit when a workspace with children
was selected and the user tried to switch focus in the direction of another
output.
In the `focus parent` command, do not set focus above the workspace level.
These containers are not meant to be focused.
This prevents a crash on repeated `focus parent` commands.
Panels were explicitly rendered by calling wlc_surface_render in
handle_output_pre_render. Calling wlc_surface_render does not set the
surface's geometry (like wlc_view_set_geometry does). Sway did not call
wlc_view_set_geometry for panels, so wlc defaulted their geometry to be at
the origin. This is not correct for bars unless their location is top.
Furthermore, for a surface to receive pointer events, its mask has to be
set to visible. This causes wlc to render these surfaces, causing panels
and backgrounds to be rendered twice.
This commit makes panels and surfaces visible, sets the correct geometries
and removes the code that explicitly rendered them.
Tabbed/stacked containers are now created only if a view is present on
the workspace. If a view is created on previously empty tabbed/stacked
workspace, it gets wrapped in a container.
Prior to this commit all windows (e.g. shell surfaces) were handled the same
way in handle_view_created. Since backgrounds and panels have to be treated
differently, they could not be shell surfaces. This changes checks whether
a client is a background or a panel in handle_view_created and exists to
let them be dealt with elsewhere.
This fixes a segfault, when trying to get parent of the workspace/root container/(?), as it is not assuered that the view's parent node is not null in the loop
Escape line return when reading from a file with the '\' character.
Similar to shell scripts.
Signed-off-by: Roosembert Palacios <roosembert.palacios@epfl.ch>
Escape line return in configuration file with the '\' character. Similar
to shell scripts.
Signed-off-by: Roosembert Palacios <roosembert.palacios@epfl.ch>
Values cannot be negative or 0; if so uses the default 75x50.
Uses the same syntax as i3: floating_minimum_size <width> x <height>, although the x can be anything.
when creating a new output, move to that output all extant workspaces
that are assigned to that output.
(unrelated) remove comment that was no longer applicable, fix spacing in
an assignment
When headers were installed in more sofisticated places (but package
config knows it right), it revealed missing paths in CMake
configuration. Lets fix it.
This patch makes sure to clear the border buffer of fullscreen view so
the border doesn't get drawn behind a fullscreen view, which would be
visible if the view was transparent.
When creating a new view, wlc usually returns an initial geometry with
size 1x1. Setting those values as desired width/height causes a problem
for some windows (QT5) because they don't request a new geometry for
instance when made floating, so the floating window becomes 1x1.
To fix this problem we can just omit setting the desired width/height on
new_view and instead let the clients request a certain size if they feel
like it. e.i. gnome-calculator.
Fix#578
I made this configurable but I didn't make the command for it. That's
left as an exercise to an eager contributor.
mod_scroll_behavior [gaps inner|gaps outer]
Would merge implementions of more behaviors for mod+scroll, if anyone
has some neato ideas.
The borders are implemented as a surface/buffer attached to each view
which is sent to and rendered by wlc in the view_pre_render callback.
All the drawing logic is handled in sway/border.c and all the logic for
calculating the geometry of the border/view is handled in
`update_geometry` in sway/layout.c (same place as gaps are calculated).
The include command (`include <path>`) makes it possible to include sub
config files from the main config file (or from within other sub config
files).
The include command uses the following rules for including config files:
* the `path` can be either a full path or a path that is relative to the
parent config. Shell expansion is supported, so it's possible to do
`include ~/.config/sway.d/*`.
* The same config file can only be included once (to prevent include
cycles). If a config is included multiple times it will just be
ignored after it has been included once.
* Including a sub config file is the same as inserting the content of
that file into the parent config, thus rules about overwriting
bindsyms etc. works the same as for a single config.
Implement #542
Sway has been very strict when it comes to key handling. Only on an
exact match would a bindsym be triggered.
This patch makes it less strict by for instance allowing the key combo
`$mod+1+2` to act as `$mod+2` if 2 was the last pressed key and `$mod+1`
if 1 was the last pressed key.
The new key handling uses the following algorithm:
1. List of bindings sorted by number of keys in binding (already the
default)
2. Find all bindings covered by the current keyboard state and list them
by same order as in 1.
3. Select the first binding from the list where the last pressed key is
part of the binding.
Addresses #452
Before passing a command to a command handler the quotes are stripped
from each argument in the command. This is usually the wanted behavior
but causes a problem in the case of `exec` where quoted arguments can be
required when passing the exec command to `/bin/sh -c`.
This patch makes `exec` a special case and doesn't strip quotes from the
arguments. It will just pass the exec command verbatim to the exec
command handler.
Fix#518
desktop_shell.panel_size was only used to determine if sway should
rearrange the output when rendering the panel in the output_pre_render
hook. This is not needed since the output will have been arranged at
that point.
It also caused sway to rearrange all the time when running with two
or more different monitors/resolutions because panel_size kept changing
with every output_pre_render callback.
Should fix#514
Swaylock spawns and focuses a view for each output in sway. This can
sometimes move the focus to a new output after locking and unlocking the
screens.
This patch makes sure that the output which had focus when swaylock
was invoked, will regain focus once swaylock is closed/unlocked.
Fix#499
Documents most of the bar commands in sway-bar(5) manpage.
The following command has not been document because they haven't been
fully implemented yet:
* mode
* hidden_state
* modifier
* tray_output
* tray_padding
Close#375
This should be a real fix for #509
This schedules a render when a background or panel is added to sway
through the desktop shell interface, that makes sure the render isn't
scheduled before the bg or panel is ready and you don't end up with a
black screen until the cursor is moved.
This makes sure that the outputs are rendered when sway is launched, so
the user doesn't have to move the cursor before the background and bar
gets rendered on screen.
Fixes#509
It's possible to assign workspaces to certain outputs using the command:
workspace <name> output <output>
However, this did not work in some cases where the workspace was
assigned before the given output was made available to sway.
This patch fixes those cases.
In anticipation for #375, reorganized and augmented slightly sway(5)
so it makes a difference between commands intended for configuration,
commands intended for control, and those that can serve as both.
This patch aims to correctly handle moving focus <left|right|up|down>
between outputs.
For instance, if moving from one output to a new output at the left of
the current one, it should focus the right-most view/container on the
new output, and the opposite if moving from right to left. This should
happen regardless of the previously stored focus of the new output.
This also handles moving to a new output above or below the current one.
Calling `exit` in sway_terminate prevents sway from correctly shutting
down (freeing data, cleanly terminating the ipc server, etc.).
A better way is to exit straight away if the failure occurs before
`wlc_run` and use sway_abort as usual if it occur when wlc is running.
Sway used to attempt sending an IPC command composed of every argument
after the first non-option argument encountered.
Now, raises an error if an option is encountered before the intended command.
Some options such as -h or -v take effect when parsing, so they still
apply.
The get-socketpath long option had an undocumented short alternative
as `p`. It has been removed.
However, the code in the options array is still the 'p' char.
This makes sure that a named output config is applied before the
general wildcard config when a new output is created. This ensures that
the config:
output * ...
output NAME ...
behaves the same way as:
output NAME ...
output * ...
This makes IPC GET_PIXELS use the new `wlc_pixels_read` call instead of
the deprecated `wlc_output_get_pixels`.
The old version worked by passing a callback function to wlc which would
grab the pixels and send them to the IPC client.
The new version works by maintaining a list of clients who have
requested the pixels of some output and then grap and send the pixels in
the output_post_render hook of the `wlc_interface`.
This adds quotes around multiword arguments before they are passed to
`/bin/sh -c` in an exec command.
Example:
I connect to irc like this:
exec termite -e "mosh server tmux a"
Without this patch the arguments are passed to sh as:
termite -e mosh server tmux a
When it should be:
termite -e "mosh server tmux a"
For the command to work.