When setting fullscreen on a hidden scratchpad container, there was a
check to see if there was an existing fullscreen container on the
workspace so it could be fullscreen disabled first. Since the workspace
is NULL, it would cause a SIGSEGV. This adds a NULL check to avoid the
crash.
This also changes the behavior of how fullscreen is handled when adding
a container to the scratchpad or changing visibility of a scratchpad
container to match i3's. The behavior is as follows:
- When adding a container to the scratchpad or hiding a container back
into the scratchpad, there is an implicit fullscreen disable
- When setting fullscreen on a container that is hidden in the
scratchpad, it will be fullscreen when shown (and fullscreen disabled
when hidden as stated above)
- When setting fullscreen global on a container that is hidden in the
scratchpad, it will be shown immediately as fullscreen global. The
container is not moved to a workspace and remains in the
scratchpad. The container will be visible until fullscreen disabled
or killed. Since the container is in the scratchpad, running
`scratchpad show` or `move container to scratchpad` will have no
effect
This also changes `container_replace` to transfer fullscreen and
scratchpad status.
This matches i3's behavior of setting scratchpad containers to 50% of
the workspace's width and 75% of the workspace's height, bound by the
minimum and maximum floating width/height.
This fixes the sizing of floating non-view containers. On master, the
floater will get set to the maximum width and height, which by default
is the entire output layout. When setting a non-view container to
floating, this will set a sane default size of 50% of the workspace
width and 75% of the workspace height, or whatever the closest is that
the minimum and maximum floating width/height values allow for. On all
future calls to `floating_natural_resize`, the width and height will be
kept unless they need to be changed to respect the min/max floating
width/height values.
This fixes a crash in `container_init_floating` when a xwayland view
sends a configure request while in the scratchpad.
`container_init_floating` gets called so the configured minimum and
maximum sizes gets respected when resizing to the requested size. Since
the workspace was NULL, it would SIGSEGV when attempting to get the
workspace's output for the output box retrieval.
This extracts the resizing portion of `container_init_floating` into a
separate function. If the container is in the scratchpad, it will just
be resized and skip the centering.
Additionally, `container_init_floating` has been renamed to
`container_floating_resize_and_center` to more accurately describe what
it does.
Since the NOOP output has no size, the minimum floating size is greater
than the workspace size for the NOOP output. In this case, the floater
gets centered in the output instead of the workspace. However, the
NOOP output is not part of the output layout and thus has a NULL box.
Attempting to access the properties of this box was causing a segfault.
This fixes the issue by just setting the floater's box to all zeroes
when mapping on the NOOP output. When the workspace gets moved from the
NOOP output to a new output, any floater whose width or height is zero
or has an x or y location outside of the output, gets passed to
`container_init_floating` again. This will then set the appropriate
size and centering. For any floater that has a valid size and location,
they are preserved.
If a container gets mapped as fullscreen and set to floating by
criteria, the size and location are never set for the floating
container. This adds a check in container_fullscreen_disable for a
width or height of 0 and calls container_init_floating
This changes the way zero (which is the default) is interpreted for both
the width and height of `floating_maximum_size`. It now refers to the
width and height of the entire output layout, which matches i3's
behavior.
This also removes duplicated code to calculate the floating constraints
in three files. Before this, `container_init_floating` used two-thirds
of the workspace width/height as the max and the entire workspace
width/height was used everywhere else. Now, all callers use a single
function `floating_calculate_constraints`.
container_floating_move_to_center and container_fullscreen_disable were
calling recursively when the container spawned as a fullscreen floating
container (via for_window). Such a window now doesn't crash sway anymore
but is still configured with a wrong, zero size, making it not directly
usable.
This modifies the places where output_get_active_workspace is called to
handle a NULL result. Some places already handled it and did not need a
change, some just have guard off code blocks, others return errors, and
some have sway_asserts since the case should never happen. A lot of this
is probably just safety precautions since they probably will never be
called when `output_get_active_workspace` is not fully configured with a
workspace.
It is possible to make the title bars have a zero pixel height while
stacked, by using a blank font and no padding. This causes a division by
zero when attempting to calculate the child index in
container_at_stacked, which then results in a segfault when attempting
to access the child at that bad index (INT_MIN). This just skips the
check to see if the cursor is over a title bar of a child of a stacked
container when the title bar height is zero since there will be no title
bars.
Don't access xdg_surface->toplevel if xdg_surface->role is equal to
WLR_XDG_SURFACE_ROLE_NONE, since this could lead to crash. The same
checks are added for xdg_surface_v6.
Fixes#3311
Just a convenience function that improves readability of the code.
Other things worth noting:
* container_get_siblings and container_sibling_index no longer use the
const keyword
* container_handle_fullscreen_reparent is only ever called after
attaching the container to a workspace, so its con->workspace check has
been changed to an assertion
The goal here is to center fullscreen views when they are both too small
for the output and refuse to resize to the output's dimensions. It has
the side effect of also centering the view when it's too small for its
container.
Example clients that have this behaviour are emersion's hello-wayland
and weston.
It works by introducing surface_{x,y,width,height} properties to the
container struct. The x and y represent layout-local coordinates where
the surface will be rendered. The width and height are only used to
track the surface's previous dimensions so we can detect when the client
has resized it and recenter and apply damage accordingly.
The new surface properties are calculated when a transaction is applied,
as well as when a view resizes itself unexpectedly. The latter is done
in view_update_size. This function was previously restricted to views
which are floating, but can now be called for any views.
For views which refuse to resize *smaller* than a particular size, such
as gnome-calculator, the surface is still anchored to the top left as
per the current behaviour.
This commit mostly duplicates the wlr_log functions, although
with a sway_* prefix. (This is very similar to PR #2009.)
However, the logging function no longer needs to be replaceable,
so sway_log_init's second argument is used to set the exit
callback for sway_abort.
wlr_log_init is still invoked in sway/main.c
This commit makes it easier to remove the wlroots dependency for
the helper programs swaymsg, swaybg, swaybar, and swaynag.
This splits each seat operation (drag/move tiling/floating etc) into a
separate file and introduces a struct sway_seatop_impl to abstract the
operation.
The move_tiling_threshold operation has been merged into move_tiling.
The main logic for each operation is untouched aside from variable
renames.
The following previously-static functions have been made public:
* node_at_coords
* container_raise_floating
* render_rect
* premultiply_alpha
* scale_box
This renames/moves the following properties:
* sway_view.{x,y,width,height} ->
sway_container.content_{x,y,width,height}
* This is required to support placeholder containers as they don't
have a view.
* sway_container_state.view_{x,y,width,height} ->
sway_container_state.content_{x,y,width,height}
* To remain consistent with the above.
* sway_container_state.con_{x,y,width,height} ->
sway_container_state.{x,y,width,height}
* The con prefix was there to give it contrast from the view
properties, and is no longer useful.
The function container_set_geometry_from_floating_view has also been
renamed to container_set_geometry_from_content.
When a floating container is tiled (e.g.: 'floating toggle' or
'floating disable'), it should be placed after/below the inactive
focused container from the tiling layout.
Firstly, the container was wrongly identifying as a tiling container
because it had no workspace.
Secondly, when calculating the maximum possible size we can't use the
workspace if it's not there, so we'll allow unlimited size in this case.
The input manager is a singleton object. Passing the sway_input_manager
argument to each of its functions is unnecessary, while removing the
argument makes it obvious to the caller that it's a singleton. This
patch removes the argument and makes the input manager use server.input
instead.
On a similar note:
* sway_input_manager.server is removed in favour of using the server
global.
* seat.input is removed because it can get it from server.input.
Due to a circular dependency, creating seat0 is now done directly in
server_init rather than in input_manager_create. This is because
creating seats must be done after server.input is set.
Lastly, it now stores the default seat name using a constant and removes
a second reference to seat0 (in input_manager_get_default_seat).
This introduces seat_set_raw_focus: a function that manipulates the
focus stack without doing any other behaviour whatsoever. There are a
few places where this is useful, such as where we set focus_inactive
followed by another call to set the real focus again. With this change,
the notify argument to seat_set_focus_warp is also removed as these
cases now use the raw function instead.
A bonus of this is we are no longer emitting window::focus IPC events
when setting focus_inactive, nor are we sending focus/unfocus events to
the surface.
This also fixes the following:
* When running `move workspace to output <name>` and moving the last
workspace from the source output, the workspace::focus IPC event is no
longer emitted for the newly created workspace.
* When splitting the currently focused container, unfocus/focus events
will not be sent to the surface when giving focus_inactive to the newly
created parent, and window::focus events will not be emitted.
* Set focus to a floating container when clicking its title bar.
* Raise floating when user clicks title bar or decorations (in the
seat_begin functions).
* In container_at, it only returned a floating container if the user had
clicked the surface. This makes it use floating_container_at instead.
Re-focus on the container on which the cursor hovers over. A
special case is, if there are menus or other subsurfaces open
in the focused container. It will prefer the focused container
as long as there are subsurfaces.
This commit starts caching the previous node as well as the
previous x/y cursor position. Re-calculating the previous
focused node by looking at the current state of the cursor
position does not work, if the environment changes.
This changes our gaps implementation to behave like i3-gaps.
Our previous implementation allowed you to set gaps on a per container
basis. This isn't supported by i3-gaps and doesn't seem to have a
practical use case. The gaps_outer and gaps_inner properties on
containers are now removed as they just read the gaps_inner from the
workspace.
`gaps inner|outer <px>` no longer changes the gaps for all workspaces.
It only sets defaults for new workspaces.
`gaps inner|outer current|workspace|all set|plus|minus <px>` is now
runtime only, and the workspace option is now removed. `current` now
sets gaps for the current workspace as opposed to the current container.
`workspace <ws> gaps inner|outer <px>` is now implemented. This sets
defaults for a workspace.
This also fixes a bug where changing the layout of a split container
from linear to tabbed would cause gaps to not be applied to it until you
switch to another workspace and back.
This does the following:
* Removes the xdg-decoration surface_commit listener. I was under the
impression the client could ignore the server's preference and set
whatever decoration they like using this protocol, but I don't think
that's right.
* Adds a listener for the xdg-decoration request_mode signal. The
protocol states that the server should respond to this with its
preference. We'll always respond with SSD here.
* Makes it so tiled views which use CSD will still have sway decorations
rendered. To do this, using_csd had to be added back to the view struct,
and the border is changed when floating or unfloating a view.
This replaces view.using_csd with a new border mode: B_CSD. This also
removes sway_xdg_shell{_v6}_view.deco_mode and
view->has_client_side_decorations as we can now get these from the
border.
You can use `border toggle` to cycle through the modes including CSD, or
use `border csd` to set it directly. The client must support the
xdg-decoration protocol, and the only client I know of that does is the
example in wlroots.
If the client switches from SSD to CSD without us expecting it (via the
server-decoration protocol), we stash the previous border type into
view.saved_border so we can restore it if the client returns to SSD. I
haven't found a way to test this though.
When a view unmaps, we start a transaction to destroy the container,
then when the transaction completes we destroy the container and unset
the view's container pointer. But if the view has remapped in the
meantime, the view's container pointer will be pointing to a different
container which should not be cleared.
This adds a check to make sure the view is still pointing to the
container being destroyed before clearing the pointer. The freeing of
the title format is also removed as it is already freed when the view
destroys in view_destroy.
If the output being disconnected contains views, and the views are being
relocated to another output of a different size, a transaction must
occur to reconfigure them. This means by the time
container_discover_outputs is called, the output is already disabled and
wlr_output is NULL.
I considered making it check output->wlr_output, but output->enabled
should work just as well and is more descriptive.