Rationale: Sticky containers are always assigned to the visible
workspace.
The basic idea here is to check the destination's output (move.c:190).
But if the command was `move container to workspace x` then a workspace
might have been created for it. We could destroy the workspace in this
case, but that results in unnecessary IPC events.
To avoid this, the logic for `move container to workspace x` has been
adjusted. It now delays creating the workspace until the end, and uses
`workspace_get_initial_output` to determine and check the output before
creating it.
* Removes container_floating_move_to_container, instead opting to put
that logic in container_move_to
* In the seat code, focusing a floating view now updates the pending
state only and lets the next transaction carry it over to the current
state. This is required, otherwise it would crash.
* When unfullscreening a floating container, an output check is now done
to see if it should center it.
In a multi-output setup, if a sticky container is on one output and
focus is on the other output, and you run (eg) `workspace 1` to focus
the workspace containing the sticky container, an infinite loop would
occur. It would loop infinitely because it would remove the sticky
container from the workspace, add it back to the same workspace, and
then decrement the iterator variable.
The fix just wraps the loop in a workspace comparison.
The back_and_forth condition is intended to be handled in the else-if
block, but this was never reached because it remained in the first
block's conditions.
container_move_to handled moving containers to new parents, as well as
moving workspaces to new outputs.
This commit removes the workspace-moving code from this function and
introduces workspace_move_to_output. Moving workspaces using
container_move_to only happened from the move command, so it's been
implemented as a static function in that file.
Simplifying container_move_to makes it easier for me to fix some issues
in #2420.
- Some platforms don't expose kill() unless _POSIX_C_SOURCE is defined.
- fork(), execl(), and setsid() need unistd.h on some platforms.
Basically, this fixes some platform-specific build errors.
This creates a root.c and moves bits and pieces from elsewhere into it.
* layout_init has been renamed to root_create and moved into root.c
* root_destroy has been created and is called on shutdown
* scratchpad code has been moved into root.c, because hidden scratchpad
containers are stored in the root struct
Calling container_at_view fails an assertion if the container isn't a
view. Calling tiling_container_at works correctly, as that function
checks if the container is a view and calls container_at_view if so.
When a view unmaps, normally the surviving ancestor (ie. after reaping)
needs to be arranged. When a fullscreen view unmaps, it arranges the
workspace rather than the surviving ancestor, but didn't handle cases
where the workspace itself was reaped. This happens if the workspace is
not currently shown and the fullscreen view was the last container on
that workspace.
This commit rewrites this part of view_unmap so it's more readable, and
fixes the crash by not arranging the workspace if it's been reaped. Note
that it no longer arranges the output under any circumstance - this
wasn't required anyway.
* seat_set_focus_warp lacked a container NULL check
* view mapping code needs to use seat_get_focus_inactive
Also, seat_set_focus_warp triggered the wrong IPC event if focus was a
workspace, which resulted in swaybar not showing the workspace as
active.
wlroots uses wl_event_loop_add_signal to handle SIGUSR1 from Xwayland.
wl_event_loop_add_signal works by masking the signal and receiving it from a
signalfd. The signal mask is preserved across fork and exec, so subprocesses
spawned by Sway start with SIGUSR1 masked. Most subprocesses do not expect this
and never unmask the signal, resulting in missing functionality or unexpected
behavior for processes that use SIGUSR1 (such as i3status).
Fix this by unmasking all signals between fork and exec.