dontInteractiveMoveResize() was added to workaround kwin sending bad
configure events when double clicking mpv to make it fullscreen.
With async geometry updates fixed, dontInteractiveMoveResize() can be
finally removed.
Another reason to remove dontInteractiveMoveResize() is that it can make
kwin crash with a debug build. For example, if you enable resizing
maximized windows in breeze decoration settings and resize a maximized
window, kwin would eventually crash in
the AbstractClient::handleInteractiveMoveResize() function because neither
isInteractiveMove() nor isInteractiveResize() return true.
On Wayland, the move resize geometry and the frame geometry are
completely out of sync.
This change synchronizes emitting of the clientStepUserMovedResized
signal to the move resize geometry changes.
It simplifies code of InternalClient and XdgSurfaceClient, and makes
adding support for other shell surface protocols easier as there's less
boilerplate stuff that you would need to take care of.
It's not practical, regular users don't care about window geometry. One
could argue that it can be useful for creating window rules, but window
rules kcm pulls relevant properties from kwin.
If needed, one can reimplement this feature as a QtQuick script that creates
an overlay window positioned above the window that is being interactively
moved or resized.
Same as real hardware wl_keyboard, key should be sent before modifier
change. For example, Left Ctrl press and release should produce
key events in the order of Control_L and Control+Control_L.
Observed in kdevelop, that isEnabled() could be false when switching
between different tabs with Ctrl+Tab. But Qt may still call show()
if you click on the texteditor widget. This leads to isEnabled == false but
setActive(true) is called. This causes kdevelop in a usable state because
keyboard grab will be created and no key event will reach application
because isEnabled == false. Under normal circumstances, key will reach
widget first and triggers another text_input_v2 enable to make input
method work properly.
text-input-v3 does not have preedit styling, instead, it can only
specify the range of cursor. Try to keep track of any
highlight/selection style range and combine them together. If it matches
the cursor position, use it as the cursor range.
Currently, if a window switches between SSD and CSD, it is possible to
encounter a "corrupted" state where the server-side decoration is wrapped
around the window while it still has the client-side decoration.
The xdg-decoration protocol fixes this problem by saying that decoration
updates are bound to xdg_surface configure events.
At the moment, kwin sort of applies decoration updates immediately. With
this change, decoration updates will be done according to the spec.
If the compositor wants to create a decoration, it will send a configure
event and apply the decoration when the configure event is acked by the
client. In order to send the configure event with a good window geometry
size, kwin will create the decoration to query the border size but not
assign it to the client yet. As is, KDecoration api doesn't make
querying the border size ahead of time easy. The decoration plugin can
assign arbitrary border sizes to windows as it pleases it. We could change
that, but it effectively means starting KDecoration3 and setting existing
window deco ecosystem around kwin on fire the second time, that's off the
table.
If the compositor wants to remove the decoration, it will send a
configure event. When the configure event is acked and the surface is
committed, the window decoration will be destroyed.
Sync'ing decoration updates to configure events ensures that we cannot
end up with having both client-side and server-side decoration. It also
helps us to fix a bunch of geometry related issues caused by creating
and destroying the decoration without any surface buffer attached yet.
BUG: 445259
The output management test checks the implementation of output
management capabilities in the virtual backend, which is not helpful.
This change replaces it with a more useful test that verifies how
windows are placed after an output change.
TestXdgShellClientRules implicitly assumes that the kwinrc config is
referenced only by the RuleBook object.
However, after changing the default placement policy in the
WaylandTestApplication, that's no longer the case. The kwinApp() object
now also holds a reference to the main config file. Because of that,
previous window rules leak to next tests, which breaks them.
In order to address that issue, this change makes TestXdgShellClientRules
open a separate config and wipe it clean after each test run. Not great,
but there doesn't seem to be other way around with current KSharedConfig
api.
It's more common to see the parent object being the last argument in Qt
and this way you won't need to specify nullptr parent explicitly if the
xdg-popup or the xdg-toplevel surface doesn't need to be configured
implicitly, which makes tests slightly easier to read.
Currently, kwin expects that the xdg-decoration is installed before the
initial commit. However, decoration tests do that after the initial
commit, which makes testMaximizeAndChangeDecorationModeAfterInitialCommit()
silently pass.
On a second look, it seems that the xdg-decoration spec is okay with the
xdg-decoration being created after the first commit (as long as it's
done before the surface is mapped). This needs to be fixed separately.
CCBUG: 445259
If the preferred decoration mode changes after the initial commit but
before the surface is mapped, there's a chance that kwin can send a bad
configure event, it's been the case in the past. Add a test to prevent
such cases go unnoticed.
If the decoration is destroyed before the window is mapped, kwin can
respond with a configure event that has 0x0 size. New tests check that
problematic case.
BUG: 444962
Ever since the effects were changed to static, each test of the
integration tests includes all the effects. The result of this is that
when doing a debug build each test is now 60MiB or more. With the amount
of tests, this results in ~8 GiB of diskspace used just for KWin's
binary output directory, which is rather excessive.
Since the tests all share a common framework library, we can change that
library to a shared library and that way avoid linking all the effects
into each test.
Most of this is shuffling around some link libraries in the integration
test CMakeLists, however, I needed to export the Xwayland class as it is
used by one of the tests but wasn't exported.
The Compositor contains nothing that can potentially get dirty and need
repainting.
As is, the advantages of this move aren't really noticeable, but it
makes sense with multiple scenes.
Backend parts are far from ideal, they can be improved later on as we
progress with the scene redesign.
The main idea behind the render backend is to decouple low level bits
from scenes. The end goal is to make the render backend provide render
targets where the scene can render.
Design-wise, such a split is more flexible than the current state, for
example we could start experimenting with using qtquick (assuming that
the legacy scene is properly encapsulated) or creating multiple scenes,
for example for each output layer, etc.
So far, the RenderBackend class only contains one getter, more stuff will
be moved from the Scene as it makes sense.
The main motivation behind this change is to prepare kwin for importing
kwayland-server code in libkwin.
As is, builtin effects are linked with libkwin. Some builtin effects
have wayland specific code. If we move wayland stuff in libkwin, there's
going to be a circular dependency between kwin4_effect_builtins and
libkwin targets.
This change intends to break that dependency by linking builtin effects
to kwin executable.
The main issue with that is that EffectLoader would need to discover the
effects indirectly. QStaticPlugin is used for that purpose.
Besides breaking the cyclic dependency, it makes builtin effects use the
same plugin infrastructure in libkwineffects that external effects use.
Metadata in src/effects/effect_builtins.cpp was converted in a list of
python dictionaries, which was fed to a python script that generated
main.cpp and metadata.json files.
With the LEDs enum being defined in kwinglobals.h, wayland_server.h
won't need to include keyboard_input.h, which is good for compilation
times and wayland_server.h will drag less stuff, e.g. QtWidgets (input.h
includes QAction)
The English word "pack" is not really the correct word for these
actions, and does not succeed in communicating what they will do. Since
the actions simply move the active window as far as it will go in the
specified direction, the actions can be renamed to say that instead.
Also rename the action names in the code to match their new UI text for
clarity.
This change merges the two OpenGL backends into one making the current
default of GLCore the overall default. It becomes the first context to
try to create. If it fails, it will automatically fall back to the
(previous) OpenGL 2 backend.
Reasoning: the differentiation of OpenGL 2 and 3 is a very technical one
and hard to understand for users. It is not obvious which one is better
or should be used. This results in many user discussions like "Which
backend to use?"
Back when the OpenGL 3 backend was introduced the dedicated feature made
sense. It was a new code base using new driver features. Nowadays the
code base in KWin is robust and mature and so are the drivers. A driver
advertising support for OpenGL 3 will support OpenGL 3. We don't have to
plan for driver breakage in this area any more.
Also our code evolved through the context attribute builder which gives
us the possibility to more easily fall back in case we cannot create the
context. Thus the need to select the backend is not so important as it
used to be when the feature got introduced.
If a user still wants to force OpenGL2, it is still possible by setting
the appropriate environment variables like MESA_GL_VERSION_OVERRIDE.
This change brings the improvement that the backend selection is now
completely removed from the compositing KCM.
FAIL! : TestXdgShellClientRules::testSizeApply() 'surfaceConfigureRequestedSpy->wait(10)' returned FALSE. ()
Loc: [/home/jenkins/workspace/Plasma/kwin/kf5-qt5 SUSEQt5.15/autotests/integration/xdgshellclient_rules_test.cpp(731)]
If CI is moderately loaded, 10ms may not be enough. I don't remember why
10ms timeout was added.
Currently, testXdgWindowReactive() is a bit flaky because the parent
window and the popup window are created together. The popup can be
configured again if its global position changes after the parent window
has been placed.
In order to stabilize the test, create the parent window, then the popup
window.