Summary:
This change ports ScreenEdges to operate on AbstractClient instead of
Client. For this AbstractClient gained a new pure virtual method
showOnScreenEdge which is also implemented in ShellClient.
In ShellClient the functionality is bound for the case windows can
cover a panel. If triggered the panel gets raised again.
The auto hiding panel, though, is not yet implemented. For that the
protocol needs to be adjusted to give a hint to the compositor when to
hide and hint back to the panel when it was shown. This needs a change
in KWayland and thus is not 5.8 material.
Test Plan: See added test case
Reviewers: #kwin, #plasma_on_wayland
Subscribers: plasma-devel, kwin
Tags: #plasma_on_wayland, #kwin
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D2793
The properties:
* maximizable
* moveable
* moveableAcrossScreens
* resizeable
Were only defined on Client instead of AbstractClient. This resulted
in the EffectWindow having those properties evaluate always to false
for a ShellClient and breaking some effects.
BUG: 355947
Summary:
Rational: unredirect fullscreen windows is a weird beast. It's intended
to make fullscreen windows "faster" by not compositing that screen. But
that doesn't really work as KWin jumps out of that condition pretty
quickly. E.g. whenever a tooltip window is shown. KWin itself has a
better functionality by supporting to block compositing completely.
The complete code was full of hacks around it to try to ensure that
things don't break.
Overall unredirect fullscreen has always been the odd one. We had it
because a compositor needs to have it, but it never got truly integrated.
E.g. effects don't interact with it properly so that some things randomly
work, others don't. Will it trigger the screenedge, probably yes, but
will it show the highlight: properly no.
By removing the functionality we finally acknowledge that this mode is
not maintained and has not been maintained for years and that we do not
intend to support it better in future. Over the years we tried to make
it more and more hidden: it's disabled for Intel GPUs, because it used
to crash KWin. It's marked as an "expert" option, etc.
It's clearly something we tried to hide from the user that it exists.
For Wayland the whole unredirect infrastructure doesn't make sense
either. There is no such thing as "unredirecting". We might make use
of passing buffers directly to the underlying stack, but that will be
done automatically when we know it can be done, not by some magic is
this a window of specific size.
Test Plan:
Compiles, cannot really test as I am an Intel user who never
had that working.
Reviewers: #kwin, #plasma, #vdg
Subscribers: kwin
Tags: #kwin
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D2180
Summary:
So far when a ShellClient got unmapped ready_for_painting was set to
false. That is the ShellClient was treated in the same way as a not
yet shown window. It was completely excluded from painting, a close
animation impossible.
This change makes use of the functionality available in
Client::hiddenInternal(). The window is considered as hidden, thus
still excluded from e.g. getting input events, but could be rendered
any time as we still have a previous window pixmap (if referenced).
This allows to have it considered in the rendering pass, but effects
still cannot make use of it as that state is not yet exposed to the
effects.
Reviewers: #kwin, #plasma_on_wayland
Subscribers: plasma-devel, kwin
Tags: #plasma_on_wayland, #kwin
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D2083
Summary:
Client uses a static Xcb::Window helper. This so far didn't get
explicitly destroyed, so the application finalize cleaned it up.
To destroy the window the xcb_connection_t* is used which the
QGuiApplication already destroyed.
This change ensures that the window gets destroyed before the xcb
connection gets destroyed.
In addition an assert is added to KWin::connection() to ensure that
we still have the QGuiApplication::instance() when it's invoked.
This way we'll notice if we have more cases where we call into xcb
after the application went down.
Reviewers: #plasma
Subscribers: plasma-devel
Projects: #plasma
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D1573
Summary:
Mostly meant for multi-screen setups: we don't want that a strut set on
a window on screen 0 results in screen 1 completely being excluded. Even
if that's strictly seen a client bug, it's better to just ignore the
strut from KWin's side.
The sanity check is implemented in Client::adjustedClientArea.
From a pure standard point of view this change is a EWMH violation and
thus can cause regressions: struts by clients no longer working.
A test case for struts is added, including some invalid combinations
whose strut is ignored with this change.
Reviewers: #plasma
Subscribers: plasma-devel
Projects: #plasma
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D1386
The only clients that really seem to rely on it are
Java and they're apparently "broken", resp. extremely
picky on the tiemstamp and probably happily refuse focus
if it's *not* equal to the current server time (ie. anything else
happens at this moment) and overmore feel oblieged to act as WM
by juggling around VDs at all.
BUG: 347153
FIXED-IN: 5.6
REVIEW: 126753
If a ShellClient supports the ServerSideDecoration interface we can
create a server decoration for it. For that updateDecoration is added
as a pure virtual method in AbstractClient and a more-or-less code copy
from Client is added to ShellClient.
Geometry handling is adjusted to consider the window decoration offsets.
Replacement for calls to info->input() which is only valid for the Client
sub class, but not for ShellClient.
In ShellClient the implementation is swapped with wantsInput() and
wantsInput() has a new implementation which properly delegates to rules()
just like Client does.
This includes the methods:
* decoration()
* decoration() const
* isDecorated() const
In addition new protected methods are added to destroy the Decoration
and to set it.
Usage of m_decoration in Client code is adjusted.
make the minimize effect work by reading taskGeometry
from plasmawindowmanagement and returning as iconGeometry()
there is one task geometry per panel window, iconGeometry()
will return the geometry associated to the nearest panel
from the window
REVIEW:125873
If a rule minus the title match matches,
the captionChanged signal is bound to re-evaluate
the rules for that client, ie. the tracking overhead
only exists for those clients where title matching
is relevant and costs rematching all rules when such
client changes its title (yes, the partial matching
rules could be stored for faster re-check, but that
would make the patch bigger and is probably not worth
it; just some string comparisms)
additional tracking of wm_class or wm_role
(what is iirc a netwm violation anyway) would require
to monitor the resp. property for changes (not done atm.)
BUG: 220227
FIXED-IN: 5.5
REVIEW: 125427
Properly handle the mouse press/release events in InputRedirection
while we move windows. If it's the last mouse release event we end
the move resize of the window. For that we reuse the code written
in Client.
Methods are no longer virtual. The only x11 specific usage in these
methods (resizeInc) is replaced by a virtual method. Default resize
increments is QSize(1,1) for AbstractClient.
Method no longer virtual and only implemented in AbstractClient.
The implementaton works in a generic way nowadyas.
Added an autotest for the basic packTo behavior for packing against
a screen border. Packing towards other clients still needs adjustments
in the Placement code.
Sync related code is split out into dedicated virtual methods so that
Client can provide the X11 specific implementation. General handling,
though is completely in AbstractClient.
Implementation is moved to abstract_client.cpp as so far events.cpp
does not have any code from AbstractClient.
This includes moving the electricMaximizingDelay from Client to
AbstractClient.
The implementation of positionGeometryTip is X specific, we need to
figure out whether that one makes sense for Wayland. Given that, let's
have it virtual to ease the transition of code which calls it.
The implementation calls a virtual doStartMoveResize() which allows
Client to do it's X11 specific tasks (creating moveResizeWindow, grabbing
input).
The base implementation is no longer virtual.
Includes moving the m_cursor and Qt::CursorShape cursor() method to
AbstractClient. In addition AbstractClient now emits a signal whenever
the shape changes allowing Client to react on it (update the low level
cursor) and also hopefully the Wayland Backends to react to it, so that
we have the cursor.