Summary:
The clipboard sync is done by a dedicated helper binary launched by
KWin. This helper binary is forced to xcb platform to piggy-back on
Qt's implementation of the X11 clipboard. In addition it implements
the Wayland clipboard - which is much simpler. Reading the Wayland
clipboard is based on the implementation in QtWayland.
KWin internally knows the DataDeviceInterface belonging to the helper
application. Whenever an xwayland client is focussed, this DataDevice
is allowed to set the selection and KWin manually updates the current
selection in the SeatInterface. By that the sync from X11 to Wayland
is implemented. When afterwards a Wayland client is selected, it's sent
the current selection which references the X clipboard and a data
transfer can be initiated in the normal Wayland way.
For the other direction KWin sends the current selection to the helper's
DataDevice whenever an xwayland window is focused. The helper application
reads the Wayland clipboard and sets it on the X11 clipboard. Thus the
Wayland clipboard is synced to X11.
The approach used here will also be useful for implementing a clipboard
manager (aka klipper).
Currently the implementation is not yet fully completed. We need to
make sure that the helper application gets restarted in case of a crash.
Test Plan: See added test case
Reviewers: #plasma_on_wayland, #kwin
Subscribers: plasma-devel, kwin
Tags: #plasma_on_wayland, #kwin
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D1973
Summary:
For XWayland windows the window might be activated before the Wayland
Surface is set for it. Thus the keyboard focus is not passed to the
window. Only on the next activate after the window got created the
window got keyboard focus.
This change addresses this problem by emitting a signal from Toplevel
when the surface changes. The KeyboardInput listens to this signal
for the active client and updates keyboard focus again if the surface
changes. Thus keyboard focus is properly passed to XWayland windows.
Test Plan:
Test case which creates an X11 window is adjusted to verify
the condition.
Reviewers: #plasma_on_wayland, #kwin
Subscribers: plasma-devel, kwin
Tags: #plasma_on_wayland, #kwin
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D2009
Summary:
The signals emitted by LibInput::Connection carry the Device for which
the input event was received. This Device is passed to the input handlers.
Custom event classes are added which extend QMouseEvent, QKeyEvent and
QWheelEvent respectively and expose the Device. The Device is only passed
around as a forward declared pointer, so even if compiled without libinput
support, it should still compile.
Event handlers which need to get access to the Device can now just cast
the event pointer to the custom class and access it. This can be used in
future to handle device specific key codes, etc.
As we don't have a proper event classes for touch events the event
handlers do not yet have access to the Device. Here the internal API
needs to be adjusted in future.
Reviewers: #plasma
Subscribers: plasma-devel
Tags: #plasma
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D1667
Summary:
In order to start the WaylandServer in kwin_x11 we need to make sure
that WaylandServer does not start the KScreenLocker integration. On
X11 the lock screen is provided by a different application (in Plasma
by ksmserver).
A new init flag is added to WaylandServer to not integrate with
KScreenLocker. Thus the default is still to integrate with KScreenLocker.
All direct usages of KScreenLocker are guarded to not be called if
the screenlocker integration is not present.
Reviewers: #plasma
Subscribers: plasma-devel
Projects: #plasma
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.kde.org/D1481
KWin starts to track which is the current layout and in case it changes
notifies the org.kde.osdService about the change through DBus. KWin has
a better knowledge about changes than the KeyboardDaemon could have, so
it's better to do in KWin. E.g. KWin can also notice changes not
triggered by the global shortcut, but by the keymap itself.
KWin registers/steals the shortcut of the "KDE Keyboard Layout Switcher"
and binds it to a new method which actually switches the layout.
The actual switcher from which the shortcut is stolen should only be a
representation on Wayland. Though how to do this is a problem for the
future. Only the active window is notified about layout changes and the
plasmoid will never get the event in time. This is of course a minor
problem compared to the fact that the KeyboardDaemon is absolutely X11
dependent.
This is the start for adding proper support for keyboard layouts. If
we have a configuration in kxkbrc the keymap is generated from that
information. This allows to have different layouts and also layout
switching is working (though not yet passed to Wayland clients properly).
Not yet working is the global shortcut for layout switching and
reconfiguring the layouts.
As a Wayland server KWin does not have to emit additional key repeat
events (unlike X11). The clients are responsible for handling this based
on the provided key repeat information.
Internally KWin needs key repeat, though. E.g. the effects need key
repeat (filtering in Present Windows), window moving by keyboard needs
repeat, etc. etc.
This change introduces the internal key repeat. For each key press a
QTimer is started which gets canceled again on the key release. If the
timer fires it invoked processKey with a new KeyboardKeyAutoRepeat state.
This is handled just like a KeyPress, but states are not updated and
the QKeyEvent has autorepeat set to true.
The event filters check for the autorepeat state and filter the event
out if they are not interested in it. E.g. the filters passing the event
to the Wayland client need to filter it out.
Currently auto-repeat is bound to using libinput. This needs to be
modified. The only backend sending repeated events is X11, thus for
other backends it should be enabled.
Whether creating a timer on each key event is a good idea is something to
evaluate in future.
Reviewed-By: Bhushan Shah
Similar to the change regarding pointer and touch a
KeyboardInputRedirection is created. The Xkb class is also moved to
the new files keyboard_input.h and keyboard_input.cpp.
Just like in the case of PointerInputRedirection no signals are added,
but the existing signals in InputRedirection are directly invoked.