Now output_begin_destroy emits the node::destroy event similar to
workspace_begin_destroy. It currently has no listeners, since they
listen to output::disable or wlr_output::destroy instead.
Pending state is currently inlined directly in the container struct,
while the current state is in a state struct. A side-effect of this is
that it is not immediately obvious that pending double-buffered state is
accessed, nor is it obvious what state is double-buffered.
Instead, use the state struct for both current and pending.
In i3, the workspace_layout command does not affect the
workspace layout. Instead, new workspace level containers
are wrapped in the desired layout and the workspace layout
always defaults to the output orientation.
The function evacuate_sticky() was changed in commit 32788a93 to be used
by workspace_for_each_container() to make the code more readable. But I
overlooked that it is not safe to use workspace_for_each_container() to
remove container from a workspace. This commit restores the previous
implementation for evacuate_sticky().
Sticky floating containers on an otherwise empty workspace can only be
evacuated if the new output has an active workspace. The noop output may
not have one and in that case we have to move the whole workspace to the
new output.
Previously, we called output_disable prior to wlr_output_commit. This
mutates Sway's output state before the output commit actually succeeds.
This results in Sway's state getting out-of-sync with wlroots'.
An alternative fix [1] was to revert the changes made by output_disable
in case of failure. This is a little complicated. Instead, this patch
makes it so Sway's internal state is never changed before a successful
wlr_output commit.
We had two output flags: enabled and configured. However enabled was set
prior to the output becoming enabled, and was used to prevent the output
event handlers (specifically, the mode handler) from calling
apply_output_config again (infinite loop).
Rename enabled to enabling and use it exclusively for this purpose.
Rename configure to enabled, because that's what it really means.
[1]: https://github.com/swaywm/sway/pull/5521
Closes: https://github.com/swaywm/sway/issues/5483
The output manager config is created when the output is created. It is
updated when the mode, transform, scale, or layout for the output
changes, as well as, when the output is destroyed.
Since the output->enabled property was not being set before calling
apply_output_config, the output event handlers were early returning and
never updating the output manager config when the output state was
committed.
This fixes the issue by setting output->enabled in apply_output_config
below the output disabling section. There are also a few other minor
changes that are required to function.
Additionally, this renames output_enable to output_configure to better
describe the recent changes.
The only output_enable caller is now apply_output_config. Stop calling
apply_output_config from output_enable to simplify the code and avoid
the back-and-forth between these two functions.
output_enable is now the symmetric of output_disable: it just marks the
output as enabled and performs bookkeeping (e.g. creating teh default
workspace). It is called from apply_output_config after the output
commit, so that it can read the current output state and act
accordingly.
This change also allows us to avoid an extraneous wlr_output_commit.
References: https://github.com/swaywm/sway/issues/4921
Calling wlr_output_manager_v1_set_configuration with an enabled output
and a NULL mode is incorrect if the output doesn't support modes.
When DPMS'ing an output, wlr_output_enable(output, false) is called.
This de-allocates the CRTC and sets wlr_output.current_mode to NULL.
Because we mark DPMS'ed outputs as enabled, we also need to provide a
correct output mode. Add a field to sway_output to hold the current
mode.
Closes: https://github.com/swaywm/wlroots/issues/1867
This makes it so there will only be one swaybg instance running
instead of one per output. swaybg's cli has been changed to a xrandr
like interface, where you select an output and then change properties
for that output and then select another output and repeat. This also
makes it so swaybg is only killed and respawned when a background
changes or when reloading.
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.
Many laptop screens report unknown subpixel order. Allow users to manually set subpixel hinting to work around this.
Addresses https://github.com/swaywm/sway/issues/3163
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.
This removes `output_find_config`, which would take the first matching
output config it found. This is fine if only a name output config,
identifier output config, or even just wildcard exist, but if there is
a name output config and identifier output config, they are not merged.
Instead, this introduces find_output_config, which is just a wrapper
for `get_output_config`. This ensures that both the name and identifier
output configs are respected.
This fixes the following case:
- For simplicity in this example, remove all output configs from config
- Run `swaymsg output <name> bg #ff0000 solid_color`
- Run `swaymsg output <identifier> scale 2`
- Disconnect and reconnect output
Without this, the output will have the background, but not the scale.
With this, the output will have both the background and scale
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.
This calls `workspace_consider_destroy` on the workspace that was
visible on an output that a workspace was just evacuated to. This
prevents having hidden empty workspaces.
Modifier handling functions were moved into sway/input/keyboard.c;
opposite_direction for enum wlr_direction into sway/tree/output.c;
and get_parent_pid into sway/tree/root.c .
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 happens if you plug in more outputs than supported by your GPU.
This patch makes it so outputs without CRTCs appear as disabled. As soon as
they get a CRTC (signalled via the mode event), we can enable them.
This fixes two causes of segfaulting when an output is destroyed.
The first occurred when an output was never enabled. The issue was that
the destroy signal was never initialized so when it was emitted, sway
segfaulted. This was fixed by moving the initialization into
`output_create` since all outputs, regardless of whether they have ever
been enabled, will be destroyed at some point.
The second occurred when the cursor was on an output that was being
destroyed. The sway output would have already been removed, but if there
are other outputs, a cursor rebase would still occur. Since the
wlr_output still existed and the sway output was destroyed, the cursor
could be over nothing, resulting in a segfault when trying to get the
sway output, which was destroyed.
Moves the call to `terminate_swaybg` from inside `apply_output_config` to
`output_disable`. The former was only called when an output was being
disabled. The latter is called when an output is being disabled and when
an output becomes disconnected. Without this, disconnecting an enabled
output would result in a defunct swaybg process.
Since the output config is no longer applied before creating the default
workspace, the layout for default workspaces on an output may not be
correct. Due to the ordering of calls in output_enable being changed in
several bug fix PRs, this just fixes the layout after the call to
apply_output_config.
`i3 4.16` allows users to list multiple outputs for a workspace and the
first available will be used. The syntax is as follows:
`workspace <workspace> output <outputs...>`
Additionally when the workspace is created, the outputs get added to the
output priority list in the order specified. This ensures that if a higher
output gets connected, the workspace will move to the higher output. This
works the same way as if the user had a workspace on an output, disconnected
the output, and then later reconnected the output.
There's no point having both movement_direction and wlr_direction. This
replaces the former with the latter.
As movement_direction also contained MOVE_PARENT and MOVE_CHILD items,
these are now checked specifically in the focus command and handled in
separate functions, just like the other focus variants.
The previous pull request #2993 tried to fix this by moving the function which
used the layers after the initilization.
Since this initialization is done unconditionally only depending on the struct
definition, move the layer initialization to the beginning of the function.
Also move the signal initialization of the destroy event.
Fixes#2992
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).
When a view unmaps, we call workspace_consider_destroy. This function
assumed the workspace would always have an output, but this is not the
case when hotplugged down to zero. The function now handles this and
allows itself to be destroyed when there is no output.
This means that workspace_begin_destroy must remove the workspace from
the root->saved_workspaces list to avoid an eventual dangling pointer,
so it does that now.
Lastly, when an output is plugged in again and it has to create a new
initial workspace for it, we must emit the workspace::init IPC event
otherwise swaybar shows no workspaces at all. I guess when you start
sway, swaybar is started after the workspace has been created which is
why this hasn't been needed earlier.
These are the same as seat_set_focus, but accept a specific type rather
than using nodes. Doing this adds more typesafety and lets us avoid
using &con->node which looks a little ugly.
This fixes a crash that pretty much nobody would ever come across. If
you have a bindsym for "focus" with no arguments and run it from an
empty workspace, sway would crash because it assumes `container` is not
NULL.