Summary:
This allows a server to filter which globals are visible and bindable by
clients.
Design rationale:
Could be it's own class with Display as an arg, but we need the lifespan
to exactly match Display, and the cardinality to match Display and it
needs to be set after we're started but before clients connect.
Better to enfore rules with code than with documentation.
I'm filtering by interface name as there isn't any other good
identifier of what a wl_global refers to, even if you could assume
you can cast the userdata to a Server::Global.
Test Plan: Attached unit test
Reviewers: #plasma, graesslin, bcooksley
Reviewed By: #plasma, graesslin
Subscribers: bcooksley, graesslin, plasma-devel, #frameworks
Tags: #frameworks, #plasma
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D8050
Summary:
This protocol allows to indicate that a wl_surface should inhibit idle
actions such as DPMS, screen locking if the surface is visible.
The protocol is quite simple: it just creates an IdleInhibitor for a
Surface. If such an IdleInhibitor exists the Surface is considered to
inhibit idle.
On the server side it is also exposed like that through the API. The
IdleInhibitorInterface is private to the library and only
SurfaceInterface is extended to expose whether it currently inhibits
idle.
CCBUG: 385956
Test Plan: New test case added
Reviewers: #frameworks, #kwin, #plasma_on_wayland
Subscribers: plasma-devel
Tags: #plasma_on_wayland, #frameworks
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D8396
Summary:
This is a preparation step to support idle_inhibit_unstable_v1 protocol.
As in Plasma powermanagement, screen locking, dpms, etc. is not
controlled by the wayland compositor but by external components through
the IdleTimeout interface the compositor needs a way to inhibit the idle
timeouts. So once idle_inhibit_unstable_v1 is implemented the compositor
can hook this up to the inhibit API in IdleInterface and thus inhibit
powermanagement, etc. as requested by the idle_inhibit_unstable_v1
protocol.
The added API is straight forward:
* inhibit: inhibits idle timeouts
* uninhibit: uninhibits again
* inhibit and uninhibit must be called in pairs, so twice inhibit,
means uninhibit must be called twice
* isInhibited: whether it's inhibited
* and a signal that it changed
The signal is mostly used internally to stop the timers.
Test Plan: Test case extended
Reviewers: #frameworks, #kwin, #plasma_on_wayland
Subscribers: plasma-devel
Tags: #plasma_on_wayland, #frameworks
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D8383
Summary:
Implement the "foreign" wayland protocol.
A client can export a surface with an unique string as handle,
then another client can refer to that surface and set an own surface as
child of that surface.
Potential use cases are out-of-process dialogs, such as file dialogs,
meant to be used by sandboxed processes that may not have the access
it needs to implement such dialogs.
The handle needs to be shared between the processes with other means,
such as dbus or command line paramenters.
The public api of the server side only tracks parent/child relationships as this is the only data kwin would need it for, the rest of the api is not exported so should be safer from eventual protocol changes
Test Plan:
the autotest works, but has a lot of random crashes when deleting surfaces,
unfortunately backtraces don't tell much and the crashes never occur when running into valgrind
behavior may still be wrong, depending on how the protocol is supposed
to work if more clients try to set the same exported surface as parent
Reviewers: #plasma, #kwin, davidedmundson, graesslin
Reviewed By: #plasma, #kwin, graesslin
Subscribers: davidedmundson, graesslin, plasma-devel, #frameworks
Tags: #frameworks, #plasma_on_wayland
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D7369
Summary:
This allows a server to filter which globals are visible and bindable by
clients.
Design rationale:
Could be it's own class with Display as an arg, but we need the lifespan
to exactly match Display, and the cardinality to match Display and it
needs to be set after we're started but before clients connect.
Better to enfore rules with code than with documentation.
I'm filtering by interface name as there isn't any other good
identifier of what a wl_global refers to, even if you could assume
you can cast the userdata to a Server::Global.
Test Plan: Attached unit test
Reviewers: #plasma, graesslin
Reviewed By: #plasma, graesslin
Subscribers: graesslin, plasma-devel, #frameworks
Tags: #frameworks, #plasma
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D8050
Summary:
I don't understand the original logic.
s_allResources contains /every/ resource, not just outputconfigurations.
Sending org_kde_kwin_outputconfiguration_send_applied to a wl_surface (for example),
results in an error.
The reason kwin doesn't currently crash is because we don't actually send
applied/failed after setting outputs. (which is another bug)
Test Plan: The existing unit test still passes.
Reviewers: #plasma, sebas
Reviewed By: #plasma, sebas
Subscribers: sebas, plasma-devel, #frameworks
Tags: #plasma_on_wayland, #frameworks
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D7898
Summary:
There is a race condition in the following situation:
- Server creates a global
- Client binds to that global (making a new resource for that
global)
Simultaneously:
- The client uses this resource
- The server deletes the global
This was fixed for Blur, but as mention in that commit can also happen here.
Code is effectively a copy and paste from e8850b014c
Test Plan: Unit test. Booted normal session
Reviewers: #plasma
Subscribers: plasma-devel, #frameworks
Tags: #plasma_on_wayland, #frameworks
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D7885
Summary:
There is a race condition in the following situation:
- Server creates a global
- Client binds to that global (making a new resource for that global)
Simultaneously:
- The client uses this resource
- The server deletes the global
We then process an event for a resource linked to a deleted global.
This is noted in the specification, the client documentation says:
"The object remains valid and requests to the object will be
ignored until the client destroys it, to avoid races between the global
going away and a client sending a request to it. "
KWayland does not handle this at all.
The global's user data refer to our C++ wrapper
The resource's user data refer to *the same* C++ wrapper
When the global is deleted the resource user data now refers to garbage.
To fix the issue, instead of setting the resource userdata to the
global, we set it to a smartpointer to the global stored on the heap.
We can then validate if our global is still valid.
Theoretically this applies to every global
Practically there are only 3 globals that don't have the lifespan of the
server. Output (which is read only and doesn't matter), Blur and
BackgroundContrast.
Blur resets it's global when a screen geometry changes.
Unfotunately this exactly at the same time that Plasmashell is
doing a lot of processing and creating some blurs.
Test Plan: See unit test
Reviewers: #plasma, graesslin
Reviewed By: #plasma, graesslin
Subscribers: graesslin, anthonyfieroni, plasma-devel, #frameworks
Tags: #frameworks, #plasma
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D7870
Summary:
The main clever part that's not just boring boiler plate is how we
handle the structure change
A surface now has an XDGSurface which then has a an Xdg TopLevel or a
Xdg Popup
We need to fit this into the public API which assumes a surface has a
Surface or a Popup.
The old Surface is similar to the new TopLevel.
The shoehorning works by relying on the fact that a surface without a
role is pretty useless.
Clients create the surface implicitly with the toplevel or implicitly
with the popup.
The server only announced it has a new "XdgSurface" when it gets a new
zxdg_surface_get_toplevel.
----
Popup decisions:
- On popup creation the server should copy the current info from the
positioner and then it gets deleted. Given kwaylands job is to keep
state, we expose all these parameter via popup.
- Due to this positioner is not exposed as a resource anywhere.
- Server API is 100% backwards compatiable.
i.e new code will work identically with v5 clients.
- Client API is not. Grabs are called separately from the constructor,
and the parent surface changed to an xdgsurface, not a raw surface.
V5 code still works as-is, just not with the new constructors.
It seemed better to match the v6 (and what will be the stable v7) than
to try and do hacks and lose functionality.
Given the client needs to change the code to opt into V6 anyway. I don't
think this is a huge problem.
Test Plan: Current test still passes.
Reviewers: #plasma, graesslin
Reviewed By: #plasma, graesslin
Subscribers: graesslin, mart, plasma-devel, #frameworks
Tags: #frameworks, #plasma_on_wayland
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D6047
Summary:
Currently the server treats incoming buffers as not premultiplied.
KWayland::Client sends data that is ARGB32 and ARGB32_Premultiplied as
the same
WL_SHM_FORMAT_ARGB8888.
According to a post on wayland-devel by Fredrik Höglund, all RGB data
should be treated as premultiplied, which matches what Qt is doing.
Client now performs a conversion rather than sending
mismatched data,
Note: This commit will still breaks a bunch of tests in
kwin as it compares the server output to a fixed
QImage with a format.
Test Plan:
Existing tests pass
Modified surface test to check the pixel data relative to the output
QImage format
not the input format (i.e both input from ARGB32 and
ARGB32_Premultiplied) should
both end up in a QImage with format Premultiplied with premultiplied
values.
The existing test was confirming that data was corrupted, checking that
even though
the output format was not pre-multiplied, the data was.
Reviewers: #plasma, graesslin
Reviewed By: #plasma, graesslin
Subscribers: plasma-devel, #frameworks
Tags: #plasma_on_wayland, #frameworks
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D7460
Summary:
As per existing TODO.
A new signal is added on Global to emit so we can process the result
whist we still have a valid object. The name is overly explicit to try
and logically separate it from QObject::destroyed().
Test Plan: Updated existing unit test.
Reviewers: #plasma, graesslin
Reviewed By: #plasma, graesslin
Subscribers: graesslin, anthonyfieroni, plasma-devel, #frameworks
Tags: #frameworks, #plasma_on_wayland
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D7531
Summary:
A compositor should send left events before deleting an output; however
if it doesn't, we don't want dangly pointers in our list of outputs on
the client surface.
Test Plan: Unit test
Reviewers: #plasma, graesslin
Reviewed By: #plasma, graesslin
Subscribers: plasma-devel, #frameworks
Tags: #plasma_on_wayland, #frameworks
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D7379
Summary:
A DataDevice will have a source when offers are available, but it can
also be legitimately cleared.
When calling DataDeviceInterface::sendSelection(DataDeviceInterface
*other) if the other data device has no source, we should be setting
that we also have no source.
In addition this also guards against Seat tracking a DataDeviceInterface
with no source when trying to sync x clipboards.
BUG: 383054
Reviewers: #plasma
Subscribers: graesslin, plasma-devel, #frameworks
Tags: #plasma_on_wayland, #frameworks
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D7316
Summary:
This fixes the check in the unittest when doing
set(CMAKE_RUNTIME_OUTPUT_DIRECTORY "${CMAKE_BINARY_DIR}/bin")
which I intend to do globally at some point.
Turns out it's comparing with its own executable location, so we
can use QCoreApplication to get it generically.
Test Plan: Verified to work with ctest and with "./testWaylandServerDisplay"
Reviewers: graesslin, mart
Reviewed By: graesslin, mart
Subscribers: plasma-devel, #frameworks
Tags: #plasma_on_wayland, #frameworks
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D6974
Summary:
Currently one has to connect every object manually to connectionDied,
which is something we can do for them.
If the user also has a connection, the second will just no-op.
This fixes objects that linger longer than the QApp.
Reviewers: graesslin
Reviewed By: graesslin
Subscribers: graesslin, plasma-devel, #frameworks
Tags: #plasma_on_wayland, #frameworks
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D6727
Summary:
This is change needed by KWin. KWin has the problem that it destroys its
internal Wayland connection (KWin as client for KWin as server) before
shutting down the application. Other external libraries loaded into KWin
(e.g. breeze window decoration) are unloaded later on, then try to clean
up their Wayland resources and crash KWin due to accessing a no longer
valid Wayland connection.
With the help of this new API KWin can access all connections during
the clean up and destroy them before shutting down the Wayland server and
thus exit cleanly.
Reviewers: #frameworks, #plasma, #kwin
Subscribers: plasma-devel
Tags: #plasma_on_wayland, #frameworks
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D6569
Summary: As 9266a94400 just for text input.
Test Plan: Adjusted test passes, fails without adjustment
Reviewers: #plasma, #frameworks
Subscribers: plasma-devel
Tags: #plasma_on_wayland, #frameworks
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D6786
Summary:
ASAN found a heap-use-after-free when deleting the focused keyboard
surface in the client library. Keyboard did not track the lifetime of
the focused surface and thus one can access already freed memory.
Test Plan: Adjusted auto test to verify the variable gets cleared
Reviewers: #frameworks, #plasma
Subscribers: plasma-devel
Tags: #plasma_on_wayland, #frameworks
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D6741
Summary:
This is a change inspired by https://bugreports.qt.io/browse/QTBUG-61930.
When Qt closes a window due to a key press event it starts to repeat the
event as KWayland does not send a keyboard leave event. Weston on the
other hand does send out the keyboard leave. In my opinion it doesn't
make much sense to send out the keyboard leave in this situation and in
my opinion that is a client bug, but if it makes clients happy we can
send them the keyboard leave. Similar this should be done for pointer,
touch, etc.
BUG: 382280
Test Plan: Run the example added to the Qt bug and it worked fine
Reviewers: #frameworks, #plasma
Subscribers: plasma-devel
Tags: #plasma_on_wayland, #frameworks
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D6683
Using the new extra-cmake-modules module ECMAddQch (since 5.36.0)
this adds the option to automatically build and install a file
in QCH format with the docs about the public API, which then can be
used e.g. in Qt Assistant, Qt Creator or KDevelop.
Additionally the installed cmake config files will be extended
with a target KF5Wayland_QCH containing information about how to "link"
into the generated QCH file, which then can be used in the cmake build
system of other libraries building on this library, by
simply listing this target in "LINK_QCHS" of their ecm_add_qch() usage.
And a respective doxygen tag file with all the metadata about the
generated QCH file and used for the "linking" will be created and
installed.
Pass -DBUILD_QCH=ON to cmake to enable this.
Use the QProcess::start() variant with explicit (empty, in these cases)
arguments, so the program strings are not parsed as shell commands,
thus preserving paths with spaces as such.
Summary: client requests to toggle those states, to be used by libtaskmanager
Test Plan: setting keep above from the taskbar works
Reviewers: #plasma, hein, graesslin, #plasma_on_wayland
Reviewed By: #plasma, hein
Subscribers: graesslin, hein, plasma-devel, #frameworks
Tags: #frameworks, #plasma
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D5757
Summary: Verified it it send before the initial_state and adjust tests and docs accordingly
Test Plan: All unit tests pass
Reviewers: #plasma, graesslin
Reviewed By: #plasma, graesslin
Subscribers: graesslin, plasma-devel, #frameworks
Tags: #plasma_on_wayland, #frameworks
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D5887
Summary:
This patch adds a pid event to the plasma window management protocol. It
allows the compositor to tell allow a mapping between windows and processes.
Bumps the version number of the interface to 8 to indicate this.
Test Plan: autotest added, passed
Reviewers: #plasma, hein, graesslin
Reviewed By: #plasma, hein, graesslin
Subscribers: apol, davidedmundson, plasma-devel, #frameworks
Tags: #frameworks, #plasma_on_wayland
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D5747
Summary:
It's possible for the surface to be unbound when we send the leave
event; we've called Resource::unbind() of Surface, so the Surface has,
deleteLater called, but it's still a valid object, and the first check
passes.
We get in this situation because when a surface is destroyed, we're
handling text input from the same source event.
Sending a nullpointer is a protocol error, and wayland kindly closes the
connection.
This fixes my constant:
"Did the Wayland server die" error messages when running clients.
Test Plan:
Got errors after setting up qt virtual keyboard.
Had reproducible case.
Restarted kwin after this patch, now doesn't crash.
Reviewers: #plasma, graesslin
Subscribers: apol, graesslin, plasma-devel, #frameworks
Tags: #plasma_on_wayland, #frameworks
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D5712
Summary:
This extends the client side API to support creating popup ShellSurface
windows and the server side API to send out the popup_done request.
This is needed to properly support popup windows (e.g. context menus)
in KWin.
Reviewers: #plasma_on_wayland, #frameworks, #kwin
Subscribers: plasma-devel
Tags: #plasma_on_wayland, #frameworks
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D5174
The setRegion call allows a null region. This means nullptr is an
allowed value which can be passed to ConfinedPointer::setRegion and
LockedPointer::setRegion.
In that case we crash if we try to convert the Region into a wl_region.
Thus add proper nullptr check, just like in
PointerConstraints::lockPointer and ::confinePointer.
Auto test adjusted to cover the condition.
Summary:
The pointer constraints protocol is an unstable protocol and thus
the implementation follows the semantics of unstable protocols.
The protocol allows to create a constraint on the pointer - either a
lock or a confinement on a surface. Those are not activated at once, but
when the compositor actively grants it.
During lock no further pointer motion is emitted, during confinement the
pointer is kept in a certain area.
This implements T4451.
Reviewers: #plasma_on_wayland
Subscribers: plasma-devel
Tags: #plasma_on_wayland
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D3466
Summary:
In SeatInterface we need to get all PointerInterfaces related to a given
Surface (Client) and call a method on it. The implementation we had so
far went through all Pointers and put all PointerInterfaces into a new
temporary QVector. In most cases all we did then was iterating over the
returned vector.
Which means we created a temporary vector for nothing.
This change implements a kind of std::for_each with the constraints of
the previously used pointersForSurface which does the check that Surface
is not null and that the client matches. If a PointerInterface is found
for that, the passed in method is invoked on it.
Reviewers: #plasma_on_wayland
Subscribers: plasma-devel
Tags: #plasma_on_wayland
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D3295
With this change the generator is able to detect whether an interface
follows the unstable semantics. In that case the header file on server
side looks different. An enum needs to be generated containing the
interface version. Each of the generated classes has a new method
interfaceVersion returning that enum. The ctor of the class is protected
instead of private.
So far only the header side is adjusted. The implementation currently
generates not matching code.
* static void fooCallback definitions added to Private class
* static const foo_listener s_lister added to Private class
* Private::setup generates the foo_add_listner call
* implementation of s_listener added
* base implementation with a TODO marker added for the callbacks
Summary:
Pointer gestures are created for a pointer and there are two types of
gestures: swipe and pinch.
At a given time there can only be one active gesture. The implementation
in SeatInterface ensures that there can only be one active gesture.
Each gesture consists of a start event, 0 to multiple update events and
an end event. The end can also be a cancel. To better support this the
implementation doesn't follow the protocol and splits end and cancel
into dedicated methods in the server side and into dedicated signals in
the client side.
Reviewers: #plasma_on_wayland
Subscribers: plasma-devel
Tags: #plasma_on_wayland
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D3169
This is ancient code that is outright wrong most of the time and at best
just incredibly unnecessary.
It is also not present in the great majority of frameworks due to this.
Its wrongness comes from the fact that it hardcodes the installation path,
which breaks relocatability of the KF5 tree as it will always attempt to
find the include dir $PREFIX/KF5 (e.g. /usr/include/KF5), which may or may
not exist given that the tree was relocated.
Worse yet, in a cross-building scenario we maybe for example
build on ARM and install to /usr but for cross building take the entire ARM
tree and shift it into /arm/usr/. If we then crossbuild on that tree the
bogus include list in this framework will make sure that we always search
in /usr/include/KF5 and thus potentially load a !ARM header simply because
the relevant ARM header was not installed etc.. Similarly of course a
build in $HOME can pick up /usr/include/KF5 headers because the home ones
are missing, causing unexpected results.
This happens whenever the KDE_INSTALL_INCLUDEDIR_KF5 var is absolute, which
it usually is.
On top of all that the premise of the code in question is flawed. It seeks
to add $PREFIX/$KF5INCLUDES to the search paths (e.g. /usr/include/KF5).
This is unnecessary because the target itself is properly installed via
cmake's install(TARGETS ... EXPORT ...) function [1]. This function has
smart functionality built in which will add the passed INCLUDES destination
to the INTERFACE_INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES property of the targets (i.e. what
the useless code wants to do) [2].
So what happens is that we install the target to the
KF5 locations, which has "include/KF5" as INCLUDES location,
thus causing the correct path to be added to the includes list of the
Targets.cmake file.
In particular thanks to more internal magic in cmake it will do so with
automatically resolved root paths such that the installed tree is
relocatable and able to relatively find the other KF5/* headers. So it
does what the code in question wants to do, just correctly.
Since cmake automatically takes care of injecting $prefix/include/KF5 we
can simply get rid of the wrong custom inejection code. This makes the
generated cmake file find the correct include/KF5/ directory and stops it
from always expecting a /usr/include/KF5/ directory to be present.
[1] https://cmake.org/cmake/help/v3.0/command/install.html
[2] https://cmake.org/cmake/help/v3.0/command/install.html
> The INCLUDES DESTINATION specifies a list of directories which will be
> added to the INTERFACE_INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES target property of the
> <targets> when exported by the install(EXPORT) command.
REVIEW: 129273
CHANGELOG: Improved relocatability of CMake export
The test destroyed the connection prior to destroying registry and event
queue. Thus causing problems. Hopefully this change fixes the segfault
on build.kde.org.
The test has KWayland::Client objects like Registry as member variables
of the test object. This causes the objects to be destroyed with the
dtor after cleanupTestCase is run which destroys the connection and
Wayland server. At least on the CI system this seems to cause problem.
In general our tests do not keep any state around, especially not
KWayland::Client objects. The normal way is to have a new dedicated
client connection for every test method. This test doesn't follow this
approach at all.
In case that this change does not fix the test and still crashes on
build.kde.org the only option is to drop the test and replace it by a
new variant which follows the approach of other tests.
Reorder the cleanup code. It doesn't make sense to delete the client
side objects after deleting the server side objects. This might be a
reason for the failing tests on build.kde.org.
Summary:
In case the current selection does not have a DataSourceInterface
updating the focused keyboard surface resulted in a crash. The current
selection is sent to the DataDeviceInterface of the newly focused
client and thus a DataOfferInterface would be created for a null
DataSourceInterface.
This is a similar fix as D3148 and D3149.
Test Plan: Test case added which used to crash before
Reviewers: #plasma_on_wayland
Subscribers: plasma-devel
Tags: #plasma_on_wayland
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D3150
Summary:
This is a similar condition as D3148. If a DataDeviceInterface is
created for the currently focused keyboard Surface the current selection
is sent to the new DataDeviceInterface. If the current selection does
not have a DataSourceInterface a DataOfferInterface for a null
DataSourceInterface would be created and result in a crash.
This change verifies that there is a DataSourcInterface on the current
selection prior to sending out the selection.
Test Plan:
A test case is added which simulates the condition by
using two clients.
Reviewers: #plasma_on_wayland
Subscribers: plasma-devel
Tags: #plasma_on_wayland
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D3149
Summary:
SeatInterface provides a way to set the current selection. This method
did not verify whether the new DataDeviceInterface actually has a
DataSourceInterface. If there is no DataSourceInterface on that
DataDeviceInterface the selection should not be sent to the current
selection owner. This results in a crash as DataOfferInterface
(correctly) doesn't expect the passed in DataSourceInterface to be null.
To ensure we don't hit this again the DataOfferInterface ctor gained an
Q_ASSERT to validate the DataSourceInterface.
Reviewers: #plasma_on_wayland
Subscribers: plasma-devel
Tags: #plasma_on_wayland
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D3148
The generator misdetected the destructor Requests by looking at the
arguments instead of the type of the request.
In addition the destructor handling changed in KWayland::Server since
the generator got created. There is now a shared implementation for the
Resource destruction. The generator is adjusted to generate the code for
that and implements the destruction for the Global resource destruction.
Summary:
By default a panel does not take focus. But there are panels which
should get keyboard focus. Examples in a Plasma session are the widget
explorer.
This change adds a new request to PlasmaShell interface to specify
whether a panel should get focus. The compositor can use this request to
decide whether to pass focus to a panel.
Reviewers: #plasma_on_wayland
Subscribers: plasma-devel
Tags: #plasma_on_wayland
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D3035
Summary:
This change adds support for auto-hiding panels. A PlasmaShellSurface
with Role Panel and PanelBehavior AutoHide can request to get
auto-hidden at a screen edge. The compositor will then not show the
surface although it is still mapped and will show it again once the
screen edge gets triggered.
The interface is extended by one new request to allow the client to
request the hiding of the surface. In addition two events are added to
inform the client when the surface got hidden and when it got shown
again.
Reviewers: #plasma_on_wayland
Subscribers: plasma-devel
Tags: #plasma_on_wayland
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D3007
Summary:
Especially for Xwayland windows the compositor might not have a themed
icon name. Resulting in a task manager not having dedicated icons for
Xwayland windows.
This change deprecates the way how a compositor is supposed to set the
window icon. Instead of passing the themed icon name, it is now supposed to
pass the QIcon. In case it's a themed icon the existing way to pass to
the client is used.
Otherwise a new event is used to inform the client that there is an icon
- no data is transmitted at this point. The client can then create a
file descriptor and pass it to the compositor. The compositor serializes
the icon into the file descriptor and the client can read from it. This
all happens transparently on client side there is no api change at all.
The writing and reading of the icon is done in a thread. Due to that
Qt5::Concurrent is now a required dependency instead of an optional
dependency.
Reviewers: #plasma_on_wayland, hein
Subscribers: plasma-devel
Tags: #plasma_on_wayland
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D3049
Summary:
Qt supports setting generic data on a QWindow. This change implements
the callback properly and forwards the property to the surface extension
instance. This allows the compositor to e.g. listen to
DynamicPropertyChangeEvents and get access to all additional set
properties.
Reviewers: #plasma_on_wayland
Subscribers: plasma-devel
Tags: #plasma_on_wayland
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D3045
Summary:
This is similar to what already exists for Surface. With this methods
it's possible to get a ShellSurface from an existing QWindow and to
perform low level native calls directly for the ShellSurface.
Similar calls will also be needed for XdgShellSurface, though the
xdg_shell_surface is not yet available through the native interface.
Test Plan: Used in breeze to trigger window moving
Reviewers: #plasma_on_wayland
Subscribers: plasma-devel
Tags: #plasma_on_wayland
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D3018
Summary:
This is what Weston does. With this change clients can create
multiple wl_pointer instances and thus get events reported to all of them.
This will be needed to e.g. support drag on empty area in Breeze on Wayland.
A similar change was done for wl_keyboard already in 25dbc84d.
Test Plan: Seat auto test still passes
Reviewers: #plasma_on_wayland
Subscribers: plasma-devel
Tags: #plasma_on_wayland
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D3016
Summary:
In the situation that a wl_client gets destroyed while still
wl_resources are around it can happen that one of them calls into the
ClientConnection during the cleanup handling which gets triggered at the
same time. This can then trigger a crash.
This change uses deleteLater for the ClientConnection and sets the hold
wl_client pointer to null instead of deleting directly. So the
ClientConnection is still around while the Resources gets cleaned up.
This is similar to the cleanup of Resource where on unbind the
wl_resource pointer is set to null and the Resource gets delete later.
BUG: 370232
FIXED-IN: 5.28
Reviewers: #plasma, bshah
Subscribers: plasma-devel
Tags: #plasma_on_wayland
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D3004
Summary:
This change implements the zwp_relative_pointer_v1 protocol which allows
to send relative motion events.
The (unstable) protocol consists of a RelativePointerManager which
creates RelativePointers for a given Pointer. This interface currently
only has one event to report the relative motion. It carries the delta,
the non-accelerated-delta and a timestamp in microsends granularity.
On the server side the implementation is mostly internal. Once a
RelativePointerManagerInterface is created one can send relative motion
events through the SeatInterface. The SeatInterface takes care of
sending it to the responding RelativePointerInterface. The protocol does
not restrict the sending of "normal" and relative motion events. Thus it
can be combined in any way one wants. This allows to have a rather
simple implementation. A user of the SeatInterface can just start to
feed the relative motion events (if the information is available) to the
SeatInterface together with the pointer events.
On client side a new RelativePointerManager and RelativePointer class
are added. The RelativePointerManager creates the RelativePointer for a
given Pointer. The event sent to RelativePointer is transformed in a
normal signal.
Reviewers: #plasma
Subscribers: plasma-devel
Tags: #plasma_on_wayland
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D2978
Summary:
When changing the selection the previous selection needs to be
cancelled. This is already done in the "normal" updating of the
selection. If the previous selection doesn't get cancelled QtWayland is
not able to accept anything new from the clipboard. The setSelection
didn't cancel it yet, due to that copy from Xwayland to QtWayland
windows doesn't work in KWin as KWin uses the setSelection call for the
Xwayland clipboard.
With this change the cancelling of previous selection is moved into a
dedicated method and called from the normal way and the setSelection
way.
Reviewers: #plasma_on_wayland, bshah
Subscribers: plasma-devel
Tags: #plasma_on_wayland
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D2997
Summary:
This is what Weston does. With this change clients can create multiple
wl_keyboard instances and thus get events reported to all of them. This
will be needed to e.g. support KModifierKeyInfo on Wayland.
Similar changes are probably also needed for pointer and touch.
Test Plan:
Auto test for seat still passes. A custom change to kscreenlocker
is able to report whether caps lock is on with this change.
Reviewers: #plasma_on_wayland
Subscribers: plasma-devel
Tags: #plasma_on_wayland
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D2963
Summary:
This change makes use of the internal key state in better way. If a
key is not considered pressed, no key release is sent. This can happen
for example if the compositor grabs a key press (global shortcut) but not
the release. The Wayland client cannot do anything with the release as it
never got the press. Thus it doesn't make sense to send the release.
Similar if a key is already pressed, it doesn't make sense to send
another press event. This ensures that if the server sends in repeating
key presses they are filtered out. Key repeat is handled on client side.
Also if several physical keys send the same key code, pressing them at
the same time won't send double press/release event.
This change might cause regressions in KWin in case KWin does not handle
the situation correctly. But that would be a bug in KWin which needs to
be fixed there. If it causes regressions the bug might have shown in
other situations as well.
BUG: 366625
FIXED-IN: 5.27
Reviewers: #plasma_on_wayland, #kwin
Subscribers: plasma-devel, kwin
Tags: #plasma_on_wayland, #kwin
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D2786
Summary:
According to the Wayland documentation a data source needs to be
cancelled whenever it is no longer valid. A reason for no longer being
valid is that the data source has been replaced by another data source.
So far KWayland did not implement this aspect which resulted in clipboard
breaking in QtWayland applications. As soon as one copied once from an
application it was no longer possible to paste to it from another
application.
With this change the data source gets properly cancelled and also
ensured that the server code doesn't run into a possible crash condition
when trying to cancel an already unbound data source.
BUG: 368391
Reviewers: #plasma_on_wayland
Subscribers: plasma-devel
Tags: #plasma_on_wayland
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D2743
Summary:
This change implements support for the wl_surface events enter and
leave. Those events are emitted whenever a surface becomes visible on
an output by e.g. mapping the surface, moving or resizing it. Similar
the leave is sent whenever the surface is no longer on an output.
The server side is not yet fully complete yet. It also needs to emit
when the client binds the output another time and needs to send a
leave before destroying the output.
Reviewers: #plasma_on_wayland
Subscribers: plasma-devel
Tags: #plasma_on_wayland
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D2528
Summary:
This change starts to track all Outputs and introduces a static
method to get an Output* for a wl_output* in case the wl_output* is
known to Output.
This is needed for the enter and leave events on wl_surface.
Reviewers: #plasma_on_wayland
Subscribers: plasma-devel
Tags: #plasma_on_wayland
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D2526
The test started to segfault on build.kde.org. It looks like an event
survives the destruction of the server. Thus this change tries to
dispatchEvents once more before destroying everything.
It started to fail on build.kde.org with a segfault. While I cannot
reproduce this locally it looks like client objects survive to the next
test and thus cause issues.
This change attempts to reduce the risk by making sure that everything
is cleaned up correctly. If that fixes the issue we can look into a
proper fix.
Summary:
Instead of hard depending on the include of linux/input.h we check
whether that include file exists and properly ifdef all usages.
Unfortunately there is no replacement for those parts which do mapping
of input event codes.
Reviewers: #plasma_on_wayland
Subscribers: plasma-devel
Tags: #plasma_on_wayland
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D2344
On build.kde.org the Surface is often already destroyed when returning
from waiting on client disconnected.
This change tries to handle the situation better: only if the signal
is not yet emitted, try to wait for it.
Newer Weston renamed the interface to the unstable naming scheme. As
KWayland does not support this interface yet, the tests are failing.
This change skips the test if the Weston is too new and doesn't provide
the expected interface any more.
If the client deletes the currently entered Surface the Pointer should
return null in Pointer::enteredSurface and not invalid memory.
At the same time a now incorrect assert is removed. After the client
deletes the Surface it might still get a left event for the Surface.
In that case a comparison between the enteredSurface and the Surface
from the leave event would fail.
Reviewed-By: bshah
Summary:
This allows the compositor to expose the absolute window geometry to
processes which need it.
Reviewers: #plasma_on_wayland
Subscribers: plasma-devel
Tags: #plasma_on_wayland
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D2183
Summary:
If we try to send a pointer enter on a null resource of a Surface
(e.g. after unbound) we hit a marshalling error:
error marshalling arguments for enter (signature uoff): null value passed for arg 1
The added test case hits this error without the change and passes
cleanly with the change.
Reviewers: #plasma_on_wayland
Subscribers: plasma-devel
Tags: #plasma_on_wayland
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D2159
Summary:
This change introduces support for the unstable xdg-shell interface in
the server. The implementation is based on version 5 of the unstable
interface. This is the version used by toolkits like e.g. GTK.
There is also a version 6 of the protocol under development which is
incompatible. This makes it difficult to implement it in a backward
compatible way.
Because of that the implementation is a little bit different to other
interfaces and inspired by the TextInput interfaces:
On client side an XdgShell class is exposed which does not represent
it directly. Instead it delegates everything to an XdgShellUnstableV5
implementation. For the Surface/Popup the same is done.
In the Registry it's possible to create an XdgShell and it accepts
the XdgShellUnstableV5 and in future will accept XdgUnstableV6, etc.
On server side it also follows the approach from TextInput. That is
there is a version enum which gets passed to the factory method in
Display. It currently supports only V5, but in future can be extended
for V6. As there is lots of similar code between wl_shell, xdg_shell
and in future xdg_shell_unstable_v6 a templated GenericShellInterface
class is added which combines the common parts.
Reviewers: #plasma_on_wayland
Subscribers: plasma-devel
Tags: #plasma_on_wayland
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D2102
Summary:
When setting the keyboard focus the server needs also to send the current
selection to the client. So far KWayland only sent the selection if it was
set. That is if the last focused client cleared the selection it was not
updated and the client might have had an outdated selection.
To prevent this situation the server now explicitly sends the clear to the
client on enter if there is no selection. Also if the selection is cleared,
the SeatInterface now unsets it's current selection to make sure that the
next focused keyboard will get the clear selection sent.
Test Plan:
Existing test case adjusted and a new test case added which
simulates the interaction of two clients.
Reviewers: #plasma_on_wayland
Subscribers: plasma-devel
Tags: #plasma_on_wayland
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D2091
Summary:
Even if the XDG_RUNTIME_DIR is not set, KWayland should not crash
if methods are invoked which only make sense after the server was
started successfully. This was not yet the case for
Display::dispatchEvents.
Also the wl_display was not destroyed in the situation that creating
the socket failed.
Test Plan:
Test case added which simulates the situation of no
XDG_RUNTIME_DIR being set.
Reviewers: #plasma_on_wayland
Subscribers: plasma-devel
Tags: #plasma_on_wayland
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D2077
Summary:
This change adds a parent_window event to Plasma Window. From server
side it's possible to specify that a window is a transient for another
window - that is it has a parent window.
On client side this is exposed respectively with a new change signal.
Reviewers: #plasma_on_wayland, hein
Subscribers: plasma-devel
Tags: #plasma
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D1779
Summary:
As Wayland doesn't have a proper ToolTip window type yet, we add it
to PlasmaShellSurface, so that we can use it for Plasma's tooltips.
Reviewers: #plasma_on_wayland
Subscribers: plasma-devel
Tags: #plasma_on_wayland
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D2030
Summary:
On client side the newer wl_pointer_release is used which is a
destructor call. On server side the shared destroy callback is used
and it's ensured that KWayland doesn't crash if called into the
PointerInterface between unbound and destroyed.
Test Plan:
Test case extended to cover the condition of an unbound
PointerInterface.
Reviewers: #plasma_on_wayland
Subscribers: plasma-devel
Tags: #plasma_on_wayland
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D2037
Summary:
On client side the newer wl_keyboard_release is used which is a
destructor call. On server side the shared destroy callback is used
and it's ensured that KWayland doesn't crash if called into the
KeyboardInterface between unbound and destroyed.
Test Plan:
Test case extended to cover the condition of an unbound
KeyboardInterface.
Reviewers: #plasma_on_wayland
Subscribers: plasma-devel
Tags: #plasma_on_wayland
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D2036
Summary:
On client side use wl_touch_release to get into the proper destroy
handler on server side. There the shared destroy implementation is
used.
The test case is extended to verify the condition and ensure that
our code doesn't crash in case SeatInterface calls into the already
unbound TouchInterface.
Reviewers: #plasma_on_wayland
Subscribers: plasma-devel
Tags: #plasma_on_wayland
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D2035
Summary:
So far SeatInterface handled automatically which DataDeviceInterface
holds the current clipboard selection. While this works fine and is
correct it doesn't support use cases like a clipboard manager where
the clipboard is hold by a different ClientConnection than the one
from the focused keyboard.
This change allows to manually set the selected DataDeviceInterface
to override the automatic selection, though the automatic selection
is still in place. Thus the next update of a selection will override
the manually set selection again.
Reviewers: #plasma_on_wayland
Subscribers: plasma-devel
Tags: #plasma_on_wayland
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D1972
Summary:
A Resource might be unbound, but not yet destroyed. In that case this
return a Resource instead of nullptr.
This change adds an explicit nullptr check.
Reviewers: #plasma_on_wayland
Subscribers: plasma-devel
Tags: #plasma_on_wayland
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D1938
Summary:
Creates a PlasmaShellSurface and allows to set the different roles
through command line argument.
Needed to verify that KWin properly handles the notification type.
Reviewers: #plasma_on_wayland
Subscribers: plasma-devel
Tags: #plasma_on_wayland
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D1932
Summary:
Plasma needs to be able to mark windows as Notifications, so that KWin
can put them into the right layer.
Reviewers: #plasma_on_wayland
Subscribers: plasma-devel
Tags: #plasma_on_wayland
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D1928
Summary:
The QtExtendedSurfaceInterface might be unbound and thus the resource
might be null when calling into close. Thus we need to do a nullptr
check.
Hit a crash there.
Test Plan:
Unfortunately no test case as we don't have a client side
implementation for this.
Reviewers: #plasma_on_wayland
Subscribers: plasma-devel
Tags: #plasma_on_wayland
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D1961
Summary:
This is a gotcha moment:
1. Create Surface with id 1
2. destroy that Surface
3. Create another Surface
Now if in step 3 the id is by pure chance getting reused and also 1, the
wl_resource pointer of the SurfaceInterface of step 1 and step 3 are
the same. This is rather unexpected and causes problems.
When creating a ShellSurface in step 1 and step 3 it would fail. KWayland
finds a ShellSurface which was already created for the Surface. The same
can happen with QtSurfaceExtensionInterface and PlasmaShellInterface which
also go into error state.
On client side this would trigger a protocol error and terminate the
application. An easy way to reproduce is opening the file open dialog
from within Kate multiple times.
This change addresses this problem by setting the surface pointer in
those classes to null when the parent Surface gets destroyed. Thus
creating a new ShellSurface won't find the old referenced Surface any
more.
For ShellSurface and PlasmaShellSurface a test case is added which hit
the condition without this change. For QtSurfaceExtension we don't have
the client side, so we cannot really simulate the condition.
Reviewers: #plasma_on_wayland
Subscribers: plasma-devel
Tags: #plasma_on_wayland
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D1937
Summary:
So far for internal cleanup we mostly listen to QObject::destroyed.
When a Resource gets unbind the wl_resource is set to null and the
Resource gets deleteLater. This creates a short time frame when the
Resource is still there, but the wl_resource is null. For most internal
usages the Resource is completely useless at that point and should no
longer be considered. So far it was still considered and could hit
crashers, if a code path did not nullptr check. Unfortunately
libwayland-server is not nullptr safe: if called with a null value it
tends to crash.
So this check introduces a new signal unbound which can be listend to
in addition to the destroyed signal. It's used in SeatInterface for
DataDeviceInterface, where we experienced a crash related to that.
A test case is added which exposes the crash, but it already needs
the unbound signal to get into the crashy condition. The actual crash
is fixed twice - with the help of the unbound signal, but also by
introducing the nullptr check where it's needed.
Reviewers: #plasma_on_wayland
Subscribers: plasma-devel
Tags: #plasma_on_wayland
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D1868
Summary:
The fact that the buffer is still referenced - that is used - when the
BufferInterface gets destroyed is an error, but it is not fatal.
Unfortunately KWin/Wayland is still hitting this assert from time to
time and the assert is not helping to find the cause as a backtrace
does not show where a reference is still hold.
This change removes the hard assert by a soft warning. The advantage
of the warning is that the compositor is not killed and that we can
observe the reason and find a usage pattern which triggers the condition.
With that we will hopefully be able to find the case where the buffer
is still referenced when being destroyed and fix that.
Reviewers: #plasma_on_wayland
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D1783
Summary:
This improves the cleanup of a shadow from client side. The server now
notices when the client destroyed the shadow.
Reviewers: #plasma_on_wayland
Subscribers: plasma-devel
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D1789
Sometimes the test is failing due to a wait on the signalspy not
working and then the cleanup triggers a heap-use-after-free.
This change tries to address the problem by using a QTRY_COMPARE
instead of a wait on signalspy.
If a PlasmaShellSurface got already created for a Surface, the
PlasmaShell::createSurface should return that one. This change justs
adds a check to an autotest to verify this condition.
Summary:
The event is sent to the client once all initial state is transmitted.
This means the client is able to see the PlasmaWindow completely created
and not in the intermediate state with further updates being pushed after
being created.
The client side API is adjusted to emit the windowCreated signal after
the initial state event is received. In addition if the window is already
unmapped, the signal will never be emitted which means the not valid
windows are not exposed to the client at all.
The tests are adjusted to reflect the new reality, which in most cases
just means removing the comment that this needs to be improved.
There is one kind of unrelated change included: when an empty icon is
set, the client side now creates a QIcon() instead of going through
QIcon::fromTheme. This wrong behavior was exposed now by the auto tests.
Reviewers: #plasma, hein
Subscribers: plasma-devel
Tags: #plasma
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D1773
Summary:
If the surface passed in the transient request is to the surface of the
shell surface, KWin aborts. It's an obvious invalid request, so handle
it properly by sending an error.
Reviewers: #plasma
Subscribers: plasma-devel
Tags: #plasma
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D1755
Summary:
So far ConnectionThread dispatched events without checking for (protocol)
errors. But Wayland errors are considered fatal. We do need to consider
them.
This change introduces a way to detect errors and expose them in
ConnectionThread. Errors are handled gracefully, they are exposed, but
not considered application fatal. E.g. a new ConnectionThread could be
created afterwards.
This allows to add tests to verify error conditions.
Reviewers: #plasma
Subscribers: plasma-devel
Tags: #plasma
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D1753
Summary:
The idea of shipping a test server is to have something like Xvfb for
Wayland. To be able to run a test application with a fake Wayland server.
To make this super easy the test server binary is installed into libexec
directory and provides a cmake function to run a test application with
the test server.
The test server takes full control over the process. It's a guiless
application and starts the passed test application once it is fully
set up. The environment is setup to have the test application connect
to the fake server (WAYLAND_SOCKET env variable and QT_QPA_PLATFORM).
When the started application finishes the test server goes down and
exits with the exit value of the test application. This allows a good
integration with ctest.
The test server is a virtual server which supports the following
interfaces:
* Shm
* Compositor
* Shell
* Seat
* DataDeviceManager
* Idle
* SubCompositor
* Output (1280x1024 at 60 Hz with 96 dpi)
* FakeInput
This is sufficient to bring up a QtWayland based application and
allows some basic interactions from a test application (e.g. fake
input).
So far the server fakes a repaint every 16 msec, but does not yet
pass events to the test applications.
To integrate this into an application for testing use:
find_package(KF5Wayland CONFIG)
add_executable(myTest myTest.cpp)
target_link_libraries(myTest Qt5::Gui Qt5::Test)
kwaylandtest(myTest)
When now running ctest in the build directory the test server gets
started and will start the myTest binary and report the passed/failed
in the expected and normal way.
This way a test case can easily be run against both X11 and Wayland.
Reviewers: #plasma
Subscribers: plasma-devel
Tags: #plasma
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D1726
Changelog: Virtual framebuffer server for auto tests
Summary:
So far we directly destroyed the resource on the server side. But this
causes a wayland error when the client tries to cleanup. This results in
the client being destroyed. A problem which brings down plasmashell
regularly when short living windows are shown. This happens e.g. in
Dolphin with the adress auto complete.
This change addresses the problem by creating a temporary
PlasmaWindowInterface for the already unmapped window. It doesn't get
added to the list of known windows and it's only purpose is to properly
handle the unmap and the destroy of the just created resource.
Reviewers: #plasma
Subscribers: plasma-devel
Tags: #plasma
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D1734
Summary:
Destroying the SlideInterface on the server side before the client has a
chance to cleanup results in a protocol error:
wl_display@1: error 0: invalid object 7
Which would terminate the client. If we would not destroy the resource,
but only delete the SlideInterface it could result in heap-use-after-free.
So just don't do anything, the client needs to cleanup which will result
in the SlideInterface being deleted.
Reviewers: #plasma
Subscribers: plasma-devel
Tags: #plasma
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D1714
Summary:
The destructor was not properly implement. Let's use the generic one
from Resource.
Test case is adjusted to verify that the SlideInterface gets cleaned up.
Reviewers: #plasma
Subscribers: plasma-devel
Tags: #plasma
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D1713
Summary:
Unlike the other cases this one is not as dangerous as the shadow
protocol doesn't have a destructor request (yet).
Once that is added the problem would be the same: destroying the
ShadowInterface when the parent SurfaceInterface gets destroyed would
result in a protocol error on client side.
Reviewers: #plasma
Subscribers: plasma-devel
Tags: #plasma
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D1711
Summary:
Destroying the ServerSideDecorationInterface on the server side before
the client has a chance to cleanup results in a protocol error:
wl_display@1: error 0: invalid object 7
Which would terminate the client. If we would not destroy the resource,
but only delete the ServerSideDecorationInterface it could result in
heap-use-after-free.
So just don't do anything, the client needs to cleanup which will result
in the ServerSideDecorationInterface being deleted.
Reviewers: #plasma
Subscribers: plasma-devel
Tags: #plasma
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D1710
Summary:
Destroying the ContrastInterface on the server side before the client has
a chance to cleanup results in a protocol error:
wl_display@1: error 0: invalid object 7
Which would terminate the client. If we would not destroy the resource,
but only delete the ContrastInterface it could result in
heap-use-after-free.
So just don't do anything, the client needs to cleanup which will result
in the ContrastInterface being deleted.
Reviewers: #plasma
Subscribers: plasma-devel
Tags: #plasma
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D1709
Summary:
Destroying the BlurInterface on the server side before the client has a
chance to cleanup results in a protocol error:
wl_display@1: error 0: invalid object 7
Which would terminate the client. If we would not destroy the resource,
but only delete the BlurInterface it could result in heap-use-after-free.
So just don't do anything, the client needs to cleanup which will result
in the BlurInterface being deleted.
Reviewers: #plasma
Subscribers: plasma-devel
Tags: #plasma
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D1708
We saw it fail on build.kde.org a few times and it looks like a
entered spy gets triggered timing dependent (no surprise it's on
client side). So better check whether the entered spy got delivered
already and if not wait for the event.
Summary:
This change standardizes the behavior regarding the destructor request.
The destructor should destroy the resource and nothing else. The
Wayland library invokes the static unbind method once the resource is
destroyed. The implementation provided by Resource::Private::unbind
triggers a delete later on the Resource. So there is no need to trigger
a deleteLater from the destructor request callback.
This change adds a generic implementation to Resource::Private which is
now used by all inheriting classes replacing the custom implementations.
Test Plan:
For a few Resources the test is extended to ensure that the Resource
gets deleted on server side.
Reviewers: #plasma
Subscribers: plasma-devel
Tags: #plasma
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D1679
Summary:
Not needed as the dtor of the Resource ensures that the wl_resource
gets destroyed.
Reviewers: #plasma
Subscribers: plasma-devel
Tags: #plasma
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D1680
The text input change creates an additional serial, so the check
for last generated serial on the Display fails. The test is now
adjusted to the new semantics. A more reliable way would be to
verify the serial on the SeatInterface, though.
Summary:
This change introduces support for text input. Text input allows to
compose text on the server (e.g. through a virtual keyboard) and sent
the composed text to the client.
There are multiple interfaces for text input. QtWayland 5.6 uses
wl_text_input, QtWayland 5.7 uses zwp_text_input_v2.
wl_text_input is from pre Wayland-Protocols times and considered as
UnstableV0 in this implementation. The other interface is UnstableV2.
Unfortunately the V2 variant is not yet part of Wayland-Protocols, but
used in Qt.
The implementation hides the different interfaces as good as possible.
The general idea is the same, the differences are rather minor.
This means changes to how interfaces are wrapped normally. On client
side in the Registry a manager is factored which represent either of
the two interfaces. Similar on the server side Display's factory method
takes an argument to decide which interface should be factored. This
way a user of the library can expose both interfaces and thus be
compatible with Qt 5.6 and Qt 5.7 onwards.
Reviewers: #plasma
Subscribers: plasma-devel
Tags: #plasma
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D1631
Summary:
When destroying a SurfaceInterface all callbacks are getting destroyed.
This used to iterate over the callbacks and performing
wl_resource_destroy on them. This triggered the destroy handler which
removes the resource from the callback list. Which means removing from
the list we are iterating on. This could result in a double delete or
accessing invalid memory.
This change copies all callbacks to a temporary list and clears the
normal lists. So the destroy handler does no longer modify the lists
currently being iterated on.
Test Plan: Added a test case which crashed with previous code
Reviewers: #plasma
Subscribers: plasma-devel
Tags: #plasma
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D1677
The ShellSurface might have the resource destroyed, before being deleted,
so there is a short time frame where resource might be null.
Crash was caught by KWin.
Reviewed-By: sebas and notmart
A downstream KWin test shows a possible heap-use-after-free if we
access the wl_client pointer. Basically we get the client disconnected
just before the focused surface gets unbind. Thus for a short moment
the ClientConnection pointer is gone. This needs to be extended with
a test case, but for the moment it should be good enough to get KWin
green again.
Summary:
So far the server component performed manual cleanup in some cases
when a client disconnects. But this is not needed: the Wayland library
calls the static unbind methods which do cleanup. If we cleanup ourselves
this can result in double deletes in the worst case, so let's only use
the Wayland functionality.
Adjusted:
* RegionInterface
* SurfaceInterface
* ShellSurfaceInterface (doesn't take a parent anymore)
* DpmsInterface
* QtSurfaceExtensionInterface
* KeyboardInterface
* PointerInterface
* TouchInterface
* DataOfferInterface
* PlasmaShellSurfaceInterface
For each adjusted case a test case is added to verify that the cleanup
works. Exceptions are DpmsInterface as the actual Resource is not exposed
at all in the Server component and DataOfferInterface as that is server
side created.
Reviewers: #plasma
Subscribers: plasma-devel
Tags: #plasma
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D1640
From time to time the test is failing on build.kde.org with an ASAN
heap-use-after-free error. From my investigation this seems to be caused
by the OutputDevice being constructed on the stack and being destroyed
while handling Wayland events, but before all are handled.
The test mostly operates on the changed signal. There is also a done
signal emitted later on. Wayland sends the done after a set of changes
is transmitted. Thus the test is adjusted to wait for done instead of
changed. So we can ensure that all events are handled before the object
gets destroyed.
I have never been able to reproduce the problem locally, so I cannot
guarantee that the issue is solved for good. If it still happens more
investigation will be needed.
Summary:
When the model gets destroyed the lambda connections were still invoked
and could cause crashers.
Test Plan: Test case added and each one verified that it crashed
Reviewers: #plasma, hein
Subscribers: plasma-devel
Tags: #plasma
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D1624
Summary:
There is a possibility that a PlasmaWindow is unmapped when the
PlasmaWindowModel gets created. In this situation the unmapped
PlasmaWindow will be deleted in the next event cycle. So far
PlasmaWindowModel didn't handle this situation and the model might
hold deleted objects due to this.
This change addresses this potential problem and ensures the model
gets updated when a PlasmaWindow is deleted.
Test Plan: Test case which exposes the problem is added
Reviewers: #plasma, hein
Subscribers: plasma-devel
Tags: #plasma
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D1622
Summary:
So far when the active PlasmaWindow got unmapped or destroyed, the
PlasmaWindowManagement didn't update the activeWindow. This means it
could expose a deleted object through it's API which could result in
a crash.
This change addresses the problem by updating the active window when
a window gets unmapped or destroyed.
Test Plan: Tests added which exposed the problem
Reviewers: #plasma, hein
Subscribers: plasma-devel
Tags: #plasma
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D1621
Summary:
The protocol is extended by a dedicated destructor request. When a
PlasmaWindow is umapped we no longer destroy the resource directly,
but only send the unmap. The client is then supposed to clean up
(which it already did in that case) and will invoke the destructor.
The PlasmaWindowInterface object will be automatically deleted after
the unmap once all resources bound for it are destroyed.
The tests are extended by two new test cases which triggered protocol
errors on the client side prior to this change.
Reviewers: #plasma
Subscribers: plasma-devel
Projects: #plasma
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D1594
Summary: To use pid_t one should include sys/types.h -- else the build fails on FreeBSD.
Reviewers: graesslin
Reviewed By: graesslin
Subscribers: plasma-devel
Projects: #plasma
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D1579
Coverity complains (in CID 1335150) about `Generator::parseInterface()`
since the default copy-ctor for `Interface` will end up copying
uninitialized memory (the unset `m_factory` member). Fixed by
initializing the m_factory.
REVIEW:127836
Summary:
Exposes closable state in the window model and adds tests. This was
included in the protocol and interface, but missing from the model.
Test Plan: Autotest extended.
Reviewers: graesslin
Subscribers: plasma-devel
Projects: #plasma
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D1435
Summary:
Analogous to NET::ActionChangeDesktop.
KWindowInfo::actionSupported(NET::ActionChangeDesktop) is hardcoded
to return true in kwin, but that's not how it should be; as this will
be fixed later the Wayland protocol needs this state bit as well for
parity.
Test Plan: PlasmaWindowModel test is extended.
Reviewers: graesslin
Subscribers: plasma-devel
Projects: #plasma
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D1448
Summary:
Adds states and request methods to determine whether a window can be put into
move or resize modes, and request move and resize modes, respectively.
request* naming pre-discussed with Martin. I chose to add *Mode to be more
explicit as well as avoid namespace conflicts with possible other Move/Resize
methods in the future.
Since these are not toggleable states, there is no requestToggle* methods.
Protocol version is not bumped (also pre-discussed with Martin) since we have
pending changes already bumping to 3.
Depends on D1417.
Test Plan: PlasmaWindowModel test extended.
Reviewers: graesslin
Subscribers: plasma-devel
Projects: #plasma
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D1432
Summary:
This adds support for 'shadable' and 'shaded' states to the protocol and
to the client and server classes, as well as the window model.
Test Plan: The PlasmaWindowModel test has been extended to test the new states.
Reviewers: graesslin
Subscribers: plasma-devel
Projects: #plasma
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D1417
Summary:
Surface/SubSurface and Shadow handle the case that an attached buffer
gets destroyed by the client. So far we didn't have this code covered,
but it's rather important as incorrect reference counting can hit
asserts.
Reviewers: #plasma
Subscribers: plasma-devel
Projects: #plasma
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D1403
Summary:
KWayland does not have a client implementation of the QtSurfaceExtension
protocol. Thus the test is different: it starts a helper binary which
creates a QWindow. The test closes that one which should terminate the
started applications.
Reviewers: #plasma
Subscribers: plasma-devel
Projects: #plasma
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D1388
Summary:
Basic functionality is covered. Changing of shadow elements not covered,
there seems to be lacking server API for that - no change signal.
Reviewers: #plasma
Subscribers: plasma-devel
Projects: #plasma
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D1398
Summary:
Now also tests:
* requesting mode from client side
* update supported change on server side
Reviewers: #plasma
Subscribers: plasma-devel
Projects: #plasma
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D1357
If the focused pointer and keyboard surface is the same we use pointer
clicks as a hint to which child surface should have keyboard focus.
Keyboard focus handling for sub surfaces is rather limited overall.
We just don't have a good model on how to determine which child surface
should get the keyboard focus. When passing focus to a surface there
is no way to know which of the sub-surfaces should get the focus.
Ideally the client should handle this, but that's just not the case.
The best we have is a reference through the pointer. But that's of
course also limited. Keyboard focus passed to the surface for another
reason (Alt+Tab) cannot select the proper sub-surface without interaction
from another input device.
Reviewers: #plasma
Subscribers: plasma-devel
Projects: #plasma
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D1330
Summary:
The idea behind this change is to make the existance of sub-surfaces
an implementation detail for pointer events. The user of the library
does not need to care about on which sub-surface the pointer is on.
It only needs to care about the main surface and passes the focus to
the main surface.
Internally the PointerInterface takes care of sending the enter to
the sub-surface at the current pointer position. Also whenever the
pointer position changes, the PointerInterface evaluates whether it
triggered a change for the focused sub-surface and sends enter/leave
events accordingly. If the focused sub-surface does not change, it
sends motion events as normally, but of course under consideration
of the sub-surface position.
Overall this means that from pointer usage perspective a user of the
library doesn't need to care about the fact that there are sub-surfaces
at all. The library does the correct thing for it.
Reviewers: #plasma
Subscribers: plasma-devel
Projects: #plasma
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D1329