The Effects API has one signal screenEdgeApproaching with effects
monitoring the last signal to stay in sync.
If an Edge is destroyed whilst visible, effects currently do not get
notified and it can stay there forever.
This patch emits screenEdgeApproaching if appropriate with a factor of 0
when an edge is destroyed.
BUG: 403354
StrutsTest::testLeftScreenSmallerBottomAligned() used to pass because
one of the previous tests changes the maximize policy to maximize.
A window will be maximized only if it's larger than the maximize area
but smaller than the screen area. That's not the case and the test makes
an incorrect assumption about how X11Windows are placed.
Make the total padding between windows equal to the padding against the
screen borders by applying just half of it on the common borders.
Adjust tests accordingly.
BUG: 469720
FIXED-IN: 5.27.6
Use CursorSource::image() instead.
Cursor caching in the ScreenCastStream has been changed so
QImage::cacheKey() is not being used. This is rather a preparation for
making kwin grab the contents of the cursor scene.
This change introduces InputDevice::pointerFrame(). The main motivation
behind it is to allow batching multiple pointer events within a single
event frame.
BUG: 454428
Qt requires xcb-icccm 0.3.9. On the other hand, 0.3.9 contains all the
types and functions used by kwin, so remove the corresponding
XCB_ICCM_FOUND checks to simplify the code.
The quick tile test waits 1s to ensure that the quick tile combine timer
is not active. On the other hand, if the active window changes, it makes
sense to reset quick tile combine status. That also lets us get rid of
the QTest::qWait() in QuickTilingTest::testShortcut().
The test used to verify that kwin doesn't crash when ShellClient sets
new geometry. ShellClient used to access decoration borders without
checking whether decoration() is null.
On the other hand, we've added a bunch of new test cases in
testXdgShellWindow, so let's remove this one. If the bug is back, that
test will fail.
This makes it possible to ensure type safety for enums, as each drm property
object can have its own type now, and it reduces the amount of typing needed
to access properties
The test needs OpenGL in order to ensure that the window view effect is
loaded and it registers a screen edge. On the other hand, we could
register a screen edge ourselves and thus allow running the test on
freebsd.
testXdgShellWindow already tests intricate subsurface size changes. The
surface pixmaps are handled differently now too, so the test is not
useful as it used to be 4 or 5 years ago.
Before Deleted merge, it used to be equivalent to waiting until the
window is closed.
This fixes tests waiting until the window closing animation completes
and the Window object is destroyed.
testPointerInput requires OpenGL compositing because it wants to test
cursor push back in the window view effect and the window view effect is
available only if OpenGL is supported.
On the other hand, ScreenEdgesTest::testPushBack() already tests similar
scenario, so let's drop relevant test in testPointerInput to allow
running it when using software rendering.
The virtual backend uses the surfaceless platform. On the other hand, we
move in a direction where the graphics buffer type is explicit, which
creates issues for the virtual backend.
This change ports the virtual backend to gbm so we could manually
allocate dmabuf buffers in order to unify buffer handling in kwin.
Its main drawback is that you won't be able to use the virtual backend
on setups without render nodes. On the other hand, given that the
compositor is meaningless without clients being able to share buffers
with it, it's reasonable to require some way to create and export prime
buffers.
WAYLAND_ONLY will create two tests: one with Xwayland, the other without
Xwayland. This is somewhat wasteful and it results in higher CI times.
On the other hand, Xwayland is started on demand. If a test doesn't need
Xwayland, it won't start.
So let's remove WAYLAND_ONLY in order to lighten kwin on CI resources.
If wayland only tests are needed, we can consider passing the operation
mode to the WAYLANDTEST_MAIN helper, but there aren't such tests afaik.
Window::desktop() is obsolete. On the other hand, X11 doesn't support
having a window on several virtual desktops, so we still need it. As a
compromise, this change moves it to X11Window instead.
Currently, managed and override-redirect windows are split in two types:
X11Window and Unmanaged. While looking at it strictly from type
perspective, this is great. But it creates other problems, e.g. we need
to put shared X11-specific code in the base Window class or mess with
"base" classes.
As an alternative solution, this change merges the Unmanaged class into
the X11Window class and disables some functionality based on the value
of isUnmanaged().
X11Window::manage() is used to create a managed Window. X11Window::track()
is used to create an unmanaged Window.
Currently, the normal window lifecycle looks as follows: create Window,
wait until it's shown, add it to Workspace, wait until it's closed,
create a Deleted, copy properties from the original window to the
deleted one, destroy the original window, wait until the last deleted
window reference is dropped.
There are a couple of issues with this design: we can't nicely
encapsulate X11 or Wayland specific implementation details if they need
to be accessed for closed windows; manual copying of properties is
cumbersome and error prone and we've had a dozen of cases where effects
worked incorrectly because some properties had not been copied.
The goal of this patch is to drop Deleted and extend the lifetime of the
original window, but with a special state set: Window::isDeleted().
The main danger is that somebody can try to do something with deleted
windows that they should not do, but on the other hand, such code needs
to be guarded with relevant checks too.
Workspace::outputAt() casts vectors to four rectangle corners and uses
the shortest one to decide which output is the closest to the given
point.
This works poorly on dual monitor setups where on the left side you have
a monitor with landscape orientation and one with portrait orientation
on the right hand side. In that case, outputAt() will prefer the left
monitor even though the right monitor is the closest one if you cast a
perpendicular from the given point to the right monitor.
In order to improve the handling of that case, this change makes
Workspace::outputAt() compute the closest point to the output geometry
rectangle and use the squared distance as the score.
The indirection contributes unnecessary complexity. The usage of
std::weak_ptr and std::shared_ptr complicates the things further, e.g.
![Screenshot_20230325_170226](/uploads/d8b68a9eff47c93c4463bb230b5bbe49/Screenshot_20230325_170226.png)
---
Ideally, same should be done with TabBox and TabBoxHandler, but that can be done in another MR.