If the surface indicates that it doesn't want keyboard focus we shouldn't
give it keyboard focus.
This was a problem with Kate's autocompletion tool tip windows.
REVIEW: 125553
So far we delegated to ShellSurfaceInterface, but it's possible that
we call into isFullscreen when the ShellSurfaceInterface is already
destroyed.
Note: the functionality needs to be slightly reworked. The fullscreen
state should change once we get a buffer for fullscreen, not when the
client requests it. This is a general pattern which is wrong also for
maximized, etc.
Whenever we set a transient we must register it with the parent and
remove it again. Also if a parent gets destroyed we must inform the
transients.
This fixes a crash in Deleted::copyToDeleted when connecting the main
clients. The crash condition was hit if the parent got destroyed
before the transient.
Reviewed-By: Marco Martin
Merges together the code from ShellClient and Client and removes the
starting differences. Long term it's better to have only one
implementation to prevent diversions in the implementation.
As it doesn't match exactly protected virtual methods are called
which allow more specific implementations for a certain aspect of the
layer resolving.
A transient ShellClient has an offset position to the parent surface.
Use this to position the ShellClient properly.
This fixes the random placement of menus.
This change introduces a mechanism for internal windows to be rendered
to a QOpenGLFramebufferObject to be composited using the texture bound
to the FBO. This is useful for in-process rendering (e.g. QtQuick) and
at the same time bypassing the windowing system.
The OpenGL context of the QOpenGLFramebufferObject needs to be sharing
with the compositing OpenGL context.
For the appId we use:
* wl_shell windowClass for Wayland clients
* resourceName from window class for X11 clients
This is implemented by sharing the window class implementation in
Toplevel.
CCMAIL: hein@kde.org
For Wayland clients we now are able to get shadows.
Internally this reuses large parts of the X11 implementation. This
could be improved to make the Scene's better aware of the Wayland
shadow, so that less memory is needed.
The creation of PlasmaWindowInterface is moved from WaylandServer into
AbstractClient. This allows the sub classes to better control when to
create/destroy the Client.
For creation it's bound to becoming visible - that is Windows which are
only created but never shown are not announced at all.
For Client it's destroyed with the normal tear-down of a Client, for
ShellClient it's destroyed on unmapped (which also means a new one
will be created again in case of another mapping of the surface).
As a side effect, this works around the problem that ShellClients do not
yet get destroyed for QtWayland's menus (needs further investigation).
Logic similar to Client::takeFocus: if window is keep above or on
screen display do not break. Also if window belongs to the same
ClientConnection as a desktop window don't break.
Prime target is to preserve the in-screen
condition of client AND window.i[1]
Atm. when the client is fully in sight
(but the window is not) - regardless of snapping
or screen change - a workspace update (screen change,
resolution change, adding/removing a strutting panel)
would allow the client to partiall escape screen bounds.
This is changed so that if the client is fully in sight,
it's kept fully in sight (but not the decoration)
If the entire window was fully in sight, it's also kept
(as is right now)
The code handles inner screen edges (if the client was in sight,
the entire window will be if we'd bleed to the other screen)
[1] I'd say that handling the client is more relevant,
but foresee more complaints if the window wasn't handled anymore ;-)
During that, i stumbled across some other issues.
- when a window centered on one screen is moved to a screen smaller
than the window, the window is shrinked to the dimensions of that
screen and now randomly touches eg. left AND right edge. When
moved back, the right and bottom edge were preferred
(to the window was "moved" into the lower right corner).
It's now kept centered.
- geom_restore was saved before keeping the window in the new
screen area (causing accidental drops on screen changes)
BUG: 330968
REVIEW: 122517
FIXED-IN: 5.4
Prime target is to preserve the in-screen condition
of client AND window.[1]
Atm. when the client is fully in sight (but the window is not) -
regardless of snapping or screen change - a workspace update
(screen change, resolution change, adding/removing a strutting
panel) would allow the client to partiall escape screen bounds.
This is changed so that if the client is fully in sight,
it's kept fully in sight (but not the decoration)
If the entire window was fully in sight, it's also kept
(as is right now)
The code handles inner screen edges (if the client was in sight,
the entire window will be if we'd bleed to the other screen)
[1] I'd say that handling the client is more relevant,
but foresee more complaints if the window wasn't handled anymore ;-)
During that, i stumbled across some other issues.
- when a window centered on one screen is moved to a screen
smaller than the window, the window is shrinked to the dimensions
of that screen and now randomly touches eg. left AND right edge.
When moved back, the right and bottom edge were preferred
(to the window was "moved" into the lower right corner).
It's now kept centered.
- geom_restore was saved before keeping the window in the new
screen area (causing accidental drops on screen changes)
BUG: 330968
REVIEW: 116029
FIXED-IN: 5.3
Input-method servers, like maliit, need to be known to KWin since KWin
needs to know about virtual keyboards. Virtual keyboards should be shown
as OSD layers, and they are one of the types of windows that actually
should be showable when the lock screen is active.
kwin_wayland --inputmethod /path/to/your/input-server
tries to start the input server. The input-server's window never gets
keyboard focus and is shown on top of all windows except for KWin's
internal clients.
m_unmapped determines whether the ShellClient wantsInput. This is used by
the ScriptingModel to check whether a ShellClient should be included. It
gets triggered by windowShonw signal called from setReadyFromPainting. If
m_unmapped is still true at that point the ScriptingModel doesn't include
it.
The PlasmaShell interface allows to create a PlasmaShellSurface for a
given Surface. Through this interface the Surface can request:
* a specific position
* a window type
So far only the window types Normal, Panel and Desktop are supported
which is a sufficient subset for getting plasmashell to work.
In future there should be security checks so that only the dedicated
desktop shell can bind these interfaces.
We need to set the depth in order to properly determine whether the
Surface has an alpha channel and whether blending needs to be enabled
for rendering.
For this a new method is introduced in Toplevel to set the depth. If
the depth changed in a way that the Toplevel gained or lost the alpha
channel a signal is emitted which implies that the hasAlpha property of
Toplevel is no longer constant.
Fixes regression introduced with 90a6814: we may not queue a signal
taking a pointer to a ShellClient as the ShellClient might be destroyed
before the queued signal is delivered.
The idea for the queued signal was to ensure that the size is set when
windowShown is emitted - this can also be achieved by first updating the
size.