This provides a new protocol intended to be used by auto-hiding panels
to make use of the centralized screen edges. To use it a Client can
set an X11 property of type _KDE_NET_WM_SCREEN_EDGE_SHOW to KWin.
As value it takes:
* 0: top edge
* 1: right edge
* 2: bottom edge
* 3: left edge
KWin will hide the Client (hide because unmap or minimize would break
it) and create an Edge. If that Edge gets triggered the Client is shown
again and the property gets deleted. If the Client doesn't border the
specified screen edge the Client gets shown immediately so that we
never end in a situation that we cannot unhide the auto-hidden panel
again. The exact process is described in the documentation of
ScreenEdges. The Client can request to be shown again by deleting the
property.
If KWin gets restarted the state is read from the property and it is
tried to create the edge as described.
As this is a KWin specific extension we need to discuss what it means
for Clients using this feature with other WMs: it does nothing. As
the Client gets hidden by KWin and not by the Client, it just doesn't
get hidden if the WM doesn't provide the feature. In case of an
auto-hiding panel this seems like a good solution given that we don't
want to hide it if we cannot unhide it. Of course there's the option
for the Client to provide that feature itself and if that's wanted we
would need to announce the feature in the _NET_SUPPORTED atom. At the
moment that doesn't sound like being needed as Plasma doesn't want to
provide an own implementation.
The implementation comes with a small test application showing how
the feature is intended to be used.
REVIEW: 115910
Client used to have dedicated methods for different icon sizes instead
of combining all pixmaps into one QIcon. This resulted in various parts
of KWin having different access to the icons:
* effects only got one pixmap of size 32x32
* decorations only got the 16x16 and 32x32 pixmaps combined into a QIcon
* tabbox could request all icon sizes, but only as pixmap
Now all sizes are available in one QIcon allowing to easily access the
best fitting icon in a given UI.
The X property _KDE_NET_WM_COLOR_SCHEME can be set on a window and
specifies the absolute path to a .color file describing the color
scheme of the managed client.
The Client reads this property and creates a QPalette from it. If
the property is not set or the value is incorrect, the Client uses
KWin's default palette.
The idea behind this property is to allow an application with a
custom color scheme to tell KWin which color scheme the window
decoration should use. So that the window looks as a solid pattern
again.
KWin core can access the QWindow of the decoration instead of the
QWidget. This is a preparation step to allow QWidget based window
decorations without any QWidgets at all.
KWin core makes already use of this new accessor to get the window Id
which is also on QWidgets provided through the QWindow.
The frameId only makes sense for a Client, in case of Unmanaged the
same window id is used as for the window() handle. Client creates the
frame and destroys it.
Given that it makes sense to let Client manage the frame properly.
The ::frameId() is therefore virtual and as base implementation it
returns the client id. Client reimplements it and returns the proper
frame id.
Method is also implemented in Deleted as it used to be passed to
deleted.
Instead of inspecting the XEvent queue we create a Timer with a
singleshot of 0 msec to move the setActive(false) call to the end of the
event handling. In case there is a matching FocusIn event this will be
handled before the timer fired and can cancel the timer.
Focus out handling used to check the event queue for a matching focus in
event to prevent short flickers when no window is active. This is not
possible with XCB and needs a replacement. Maybe a short timer event.
Interestingly the attribute send_event from XUnmapEvent does not exist in
xcb_unmap_notify_event_t and also the X protocol doesn't know anything
about send event.
At same time also renaming variable to follow naming scheme and have a
sensible name. Also moved default value initialization into initializer
list.
REVIEW: 110283
The type of the transient_for related variables are changed to
xcb_window_t. They cannot be Xcb::Window as we don't take ownership over
the transient for window.
Variables are renamed to m_camelCase to follow naming scheme.
A wrapper for retrieving the TransientFor hint is added to the Xcb
Wrappers.
Using Xcb::Window to wrap this helper window and port all the used XLib
calls to XCB.
Also renaming the variable to m_ and camel case to follow general naming
scheme.
Unfortunately the Xcb::Window wrapper cannot be used for the client
window as the client should not be destroyed by KWin.
All the API calls except XSelectInput are changed to xcb and the name is
adjusted to m_client to follow the naming scheme.
The Xcb::Window nicely encapsulates the created wrapper window. As
almost all code is adjusted, the variable is also renamed to
m_wrapper to follow the normal naming scheme.
For all the decoration updates called from Client into the decoration we
also have a signal being emitted. So turning the pure virtual public
functions into slots means we can just connect our existing signals and
get rid off the deep function calls.
The keepAbove/Below signals are changed to take a boolean argument as
needed by KDecoration and a few emitted signals are moved to a better
fitting location.
REVIEW: 110335
Main motivation for this change is that it's unhandy to have the class
definition in workspace.h and client.h while the implementation is in
events.cpp although nothing in events.cpp uses it directly.
By getting it out of workspace.h we get the header a little bit smaller
which should improve compile time given that it's included almost
everywhere.
In events.cpp the enum usage is changed to NETWinInfo as that's the class
where they are defined.
RootInfo does no longer hold a workspace pointer. Where it's needed it
uses the singleton accessor of Workspace.
REVIEW: 110199