We can't arm the timer during cursor creation since the config may not
be ready yet. Instead arm the timer while applying the input
configuration, by this time the configuration has been parsed and we can
arm the hide timer.
Fixes#5686
According to the wayland docs, wayland timers are disarmed on creation.
This leads to the cursor not being hidden if there is no activity after
creation, since the timer is armed on activity, but not at creation.
Arm the timer after creation to ensure the cursor is hidden even if
there is no cursor activity after creation.
Fixes#5684
Reset the event source after unhiding the cursor, to ensure that the
timeout starts after showing the cursor. Also remove the open coded
variant in seat_consider_warp_to_focus().
Fixes#5679
My primary issue was IntelliJ IDEA's code suggestion pop-up not returning focus
to the active editing window.
I have spent some time looking at the changes of @Xyene (#5398) and
@RyanDwyer (#2103). I think my proposed change maintains the status
quo for the most part whilst fixing my focus issue.
I have verified that @Xyene's fix for IntelliJ sub-menus still works.
I have done basic testing which consists of:
- Chrome
- IntelliJ IDEA 2020.2.1
- VSCode
- Alacritty
It seems to hold up. I at least didn't see any obvious errors.
Relates to #3007
This changes it so all libinput config options are set on any device
that supports it. Previously, only a subset of libinput config options
were being considered depending on the input type. Instead of trying to
guess which properties the device may support, attempt to set any
configured property regardless of the device type. All of the functions
already have early returns in them for when the device does not actually
support the property. This brings the configuration side inline with
describe_libinput_device for the IPC side. This change was prompted
by a tablet tool showing the calibration matrix property in the IPC
message, but not being able to actually change it since that property
was only being considered for the touch input type.
render_border_textures_for_container.
* This was causing an UB because we were trying to get an output from
some random offset in the damage, and we were getting the damage after
this offset, reading garbage data after the end of the damage struct
size
* On my machine, the output offset was an nullptr, so when it got
dereferenced, core was dumped.
Instead of listening to both transform and scale events, we can listen
to the commit event and use the new wlr_output_event_commit struct to
decide what to do.
This de-duplicates some of the work we were doing twice when an output
was re-configured.
Depends on [1].
[1]: https://github.com/swaywm/wlroots/pull/2315
The following statusbar output is not considered by sway to be following
the swaybar-protocol:
{"version":1}[[{"full_text":"2.89","urgent":false}],
However this one is:
{"version":1}\n[[{"full_text":"2.89","urgent":false}],
Both outputs contain a header with the required values and an unfinished
array of objects with the required values, but the first one is showed
verbatim.
If the environment variable is not defined, getenv returns NULL.
Passing a NULL pointer to the "%s" format specifier is undefined
behavior. Even if some implementations output "(null)", an empty
string is nicer.
`!*rgba` tests if the first byte of rgba isn't `'\0'`.
`hex_to_rgba_hex` returns NULL if `parse_color` fails. There's a null
pointer dereference in that case. The intended behavior is `!rgba`.
The pointer `data` is cast to a more strictly aligned pointer type. To
prevent issues, the `data32` buffer is removed and its occurrences are
replaced with an offset from the `data` buffer.