commit d94a8722cb
warned this was coming, back in 2013.
I've seen libraries that have wayland client and server using functions
in the same file. Since struct wl_buffer still exists as an opaque
entity in client code, the vestigial deprecated wl_buffer from the
server include will generate warnings when not building with
WL_HIDE_DEPRECATED.
Signed-off-by: Derek Foreman <derekf@osg.samsung.com>
Acked-by: Emil Velikov <emil.velikov@collabora.com>
Reviewed-by: Pekka Paalanen <pekka.paalanen@collabora.co.uk>
Reviewed-by: Daniel Stone <daniels@collabora.com>
Add some inline information, what the macro is used for, why it came to
be and what we shouldn't do if we consider further deprecation in the future
deprecation.
Cc: Pekka Paalanen <pekka.paalanen@collabora.co.uk>
Signed-off-by: Emil Velikov <emil.velikov@collabora.com>
Reviewed-by: Pekka Paalanen <pekka.paalanen@collabora.co.uk>
Some headers and source files have been using types such as uint32_t
without explicitly including stdint.h.
Explicitly include stdint.h where appropriate.
Signed-off-by: Yong Bakos <ybakos@humanoriented.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Engestrom <eric.engestrom@imgtec.com>
wayland-server.h: Adjust line breaks between prototypes.
wayland-server-core.h:
Adjust line breaks between prototypes.
Adjust space between splats and identifiers.
Remove unconventional linebreak before first parameter.
Add line breaks after return types.
Remove unnecessary forward declarations, and:
- move 'struct wl_client' declaration close to the dependent typedef
- tastefully move 'wl_shm_buffer_get' to leverage the return type
Replace explicit __attribute__ with WL_PRINTF macro.
Signed-off-by: Yong Bakos <ybakos@humanoriented.com>
Reviewed-by: Pekka Paalanen <pekka.paalanen@collabora.co.uk>
Publican was generating a subtle error during a build:
Error: no ID for constraint linkend: Server-wayland-server-core_8h.
This was caused by doxygen applying the doc comment at the top of
wayland-server.h as the documentation for struct wl_object. As such, the
generated documentation for wl_object was also very incorrect.
Make the file doc comments in wayland-client.h and wayland-server.h real
doxygen file doc comments with the \file command, add a \brief, make the
inclusion warning a \warning, correct the language of the comment in
wayland-server.h, and remove one unnecessary line break.
This squelches the publican error, removes the bad wl_object documentation,
and makes the comment appear in the generated html documentation.
References: d74a9c079b
Signed-off-by: Yong Bakos <ybakos@humanoriented.com>
Reviewed-by: Bryce Harrington <bryce@osg.samsung.com>
wayland-client.h and wayland-server.h include the protocol headers generated
at build time. This means that a libwayland user cannot generate and use
protocol code created from a wayland.xml newer than the installed libwayland,
because it is not possible to only include the API header.
Another use case is language bindings, which would generate their own protocol
code and which only need to use the library ABI, not the generated C code.
This commit adds wayland-client-core.h and wayland-server-core.h which do not
include the protocol headers or any deprecated code.
Reviewed-by: Jason Ekstrand <jason@jlekstrand.net>
Reviewed-by: Pekka Paalanen <pekka.paalanen@collabora.co.uk>
Also removed \comment and used C++ comments. There does not appear
to be any other way to put comments into code samples.
Reviewed-by: Bryce Harrington <b.harrington@samsung.com>
Use function linking syntax instead of variable linking, to resolve two
warnings:
wayland-server.h:167: warning: explicit link request to 'wl_list_remove' could not be resolved
wayland-server.h:188: warning: explicit link request to 'wl_list_remove' could not be resolved
Signed-off-by: Bryce Harrington <b.harrington@samsung.com>
The previous implementation of the wl_container_of macro was
dereferencing the sample pointer in order to get an address of the
member to calculate the offset. Ideally this shouldn't cause any
problems because the dereference doesn't actually cause the address to
be read from so it shouldn't matter if the pointer is uninitialised.
However this is probably technically invalid and could cause undefined
behavior. Clang appears to take advantage of this undefined behavior
and doesn't bother doing the subtraction. It also gives a warning when
it does this.
The documentation for wl_container_of implies that it should only be
given an initialised pointer and if that is done then there is no
problem with clang. However this is quite easy to forget and doesn't
cause any problems or warnings with gcc so it's quite easy to
accidentally break clang.
To fix the problem this changes the macro to use pointer -
offsetof(__typeof__(sample), member) so that it doesn't need to deref
the sample pointer. This does however require that the __typeof__
operator is supported by the compiler. In practice we probably only
care about gcc and clang and both of these happily support the
operator.
The previous implementation was also using __typeof__ but it had a
fallback path avoiding it when the operator isn't available. The
fallback effectively has undefined behaviour and it is targetting
unknown compilers so it is probably not a good idea to leave it in.
Instead, this patch just removes it. If someone finds a compiler that
doesn't have __typeof__ but does work with the old implementation then
maybe they could add it back in as a special case.
This patch removes the initialisation anywhere where the sample
pointer was being unitialised before using wl_container_of. The
documentation for the macro has also been updated to specify that this
is OK.
In wl_display_add_shm_format(), check the return value from
wl_array_add() before dereferencing it and assigning it a value.
Return the resulting pointer back to the caller.
Signed-off-by: U. Artie Eoff <ullysses.a.eoff@intel.com>
Linux will let you mmap a region of a file that is larger than the
size of the file. If you then try to read from that region the process
will get a SIGBUS signal. Currently the clients can use this to crash
a compositor because it can create a pool and lie about the size of
the file which will cause the compositor to try and read past the end
of it. The compositor can't simply check the size of the file to
verify that it is big enough because then there is a race condition
where the client may truncate the file after the check is performed.
This patch adds the following two public functions in the server API
which can be used wrap access to an SHM buffer:
void wl_shm_buffer_begin_access(struct wl_shm_buffer *buffer);
void wl_shm_buffer_end_access(struct wl_shm_buffer *buffer);
The first time wl_shm_buffer_begin_access is called a signal handler
for SIGBUS will be installed. If the signal is caught then the buffer
for the current pool is remapped to an anonymous private buffer at the
same address which allows the compositor to continue without crashing.
The end_access function will then post an error to the buffer
resource.
The current pool is stored as part of some thread-local storage so
that multiple threads can safely independently access separate
buffers.
Eventually we may want to add some more API so that compositors can
hook into the signal handler or replace it entirely if they also want
to do some SIGBUS handling.
This commit adds support for server-side languages bindings. This is done
in two ways:
1. Adding a wl_resource_set_dispatcher function that corresponds to
wl_resource_set_interface. The only difference between the two functions
is that the new version takes a dispatcher along with the implementation,
data, and destructor. This allows for runtime calling of native language
functions for callbacks instead of having to generate function pointers.
2. Adding versions of wl_resource_post_event and wl_resource_queue_event
that take an array of wl_argument instead of a variable argument list.
This allows for easier run-time argument conversion and removes the need
for libffi-based calling of variadic functions.
Signed-off-by: Jason Ekstrand <jason@jlekstrand.net>
This patch introduces wl_global_create() and wl_global_destroy() as
replacements for wl_display_add_global() and wl_display_remove_global().
The add/remove_global API did not allow a compositor to indicate
the implemented version of a global, it just took the version from
the interface meta data. The problem is that the meta data
(which lives in libwayland-server.so) can get out of sync with a
compositor implementation. The compositor will then advertise a
higher version of a global than what it actually implements.
The new API lets a compositor pass in a version when it registers
a global, which solves the problem. The add/remove API is deprecated
with this patch and will be removed.
The wl_client_add/new_object() functions sends out an NO_MEMORY error if
the allocation fails. This was convenient in a couple of places where
that was all the error handling that was needed. Unfortunately that
looks like out-of-memory isn't handled at the call site and set a bad
precedent for not cleaning up properly or not handling at all.
As we're introducing wl_resource_create() as a replacement for those two
functions, let's remove the automatic error event posting and require
the caller to do that if necessary.
This commit also introduces a new helper, wl_client_post_no_memory() to
make it possible to send NO_MEMORY events from bind where we don't have
a wl_resource.
A new function, wl_resource_create(), lets the compositor create a
wl_resource for a given version of the interface. Passing 0 for the
object ID will allocate a new ID. The implementation, user data and
destructor can be set with wl_resource_set_implementation().
These two functions deprecates wl_client_add/new_object and the
main difference and motivation is the ability to provide a version number
for the resource. This lets the compositor track which version of the
interface a client has created and we'll use that to verify incoming requests.
Signed-off-by: Jason Ekstrand <jason@jlekstrand.net>
With the work to add wl_resource accessors and port weston to use them,
we're ready to make wl_resource and wl_object opaque structs. We keep
wl_buffer in the header for EGL stacks to use, but don't expose it by
default. In time we'll remove it completely, but for now it provides a
transition paths for code that still uses wl_buffer.
Reviewed-by: Jason Ekstrand<jason@jlekstrand.net>
This commit does not break ABI. It merely changes the types of some things
and adds a wl_shm_buffer_get function.
Signed-off-by: Jason Ekstrand <jason@jlekstrand.net>
Looking at the functionality in the server library, it's clear (in
hindsight) that there are two different "things" in there: 1) The IPC
API, that is, everything that concerns wl_display, wl_client,
wl_resource and 2) and half-hearted attempt at sharing input code and
focus logic that leaves a lot of problematic structs in the API
surface, only to share less than 1000 lines of code.
We can just move those input structs and helper functions into weston
and cut libwayland-server down to just the core server side IPC API.
In the short term, compositors can copy those structs and functions
into their source, but longer term, they're probably better off
reimplementing those objects and logic their native framework
(QObject, GObject etc).
Add a destroy listener so that when the current surface associated with the
pointer is destroyed we can reset the pointer to the current surface. In order
to achieve this add a wl_pointer_set_current() which handles assigning the
surface and creating the listener.
This resolves a use-after-free error triggered with nested popup surfaces
Fixes: https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=696946
use the wl_notify_func type, and not void *, or else wl_signal_get
will not be usable by a c++ plugin because it will not cast
void * to a function pointer.
This commit adds a wl_resource_init function for initializing wl_resource
structures similar to wl_client_add_object.
From this commit forward, wl_resource structures should not be initialized
manually, but should use wl_resource_init. In the event of a change to the
wl_resource structure, this allows us to protect against regressions by filling
in added fields with reasonable defaults. In this way, while changing
wl_object or wl_resource still constitutes an ABI break, compositors following
this rule will only need to be recompiled in order to properly link against the
new version.
Signed-off-by: Jason Ekstrand <jason@jlekstrand.net>
Touch grabs allow the compositor to be placed into a mode where touch events
temporarily bypass their default behavior and perform other operations.
Wayland already supports keyboard and pointer grabs, but was lacking
corresponding touch support. The default touch grab handlers here contain the
client event delivery code that was previously called directly in weston.
Signed-off-by: Matt Roper <matthew.d.roper@intel.com>
The update callback for the file descriptors was always a bit awkward and
un-intuitive. The idea was that whenever the protocol code needed to
write data to the fd it would call the 'update' function. This function
would adjust the mainloop so that it polls for POLLOUT on the fd so we
can eventually flush the data to the socket.
The problem is that in multi-threaded applications, any thread can issue
a request, which writes data to the output buffer and thus triggers the
update callback. Thus, we'll be calling out with the display mutex
held and may call from any thread.
The solution is to eliminate the udpate callback and just require that
the application or server flushes all connection buffers before blocking.
This turns out to be a simpler API, although we now require clients to
deal with EAGAIN and non-blocking writes. It also saves a few syscalls,
since the socket will be writable most of the time and most writes will
complete, so we avoid changing epoll to poll for POLLOUT, then write and
then change it back for each write.
When integrating the wayland event-loop into another event-loop, we
currently have no chance of checking whether there are pending idle
sources that have to be called. This patch exports the
"dispatch_idle_sources()" call so other event loops can call this before
going to sleep. This is what wl_event_loop_dispatch() currently does so we
simply allow external event-loops to do the same now.
To avoid breaking existing applications, we keep the call to
dispatch_idle_sources() in wl_event_loop_dispatch() for now. However, if
we want we can remove this later and require every application to call
this manually. This needs to be discussed, but the overhead is negligible
so we will probably leave it as it is.
This finally allows to fully integrate the wayland-server API into
existing event-loops without any nasty workarounds.
Signed-off-by: David Herrmann <dh.herrmann@googlemail.com>
wl_client_add_resource() used to return no error even though the new
resource wasn't added to the client. This currently makes it very easy to
DOS weston by simply posting thousands of "create_surface" requests with
an invalid ID. Weston simply assumes the wl_client_add_resource() request
succeeds but will never destroy the surface again as the "destroy" signal
is never called (because the surface isn't linked into the wl_map).
This change makes wl_client_add_resource() return the new ID of the added
object and 0 on failure. Servers (like weston) can now correctly
immediately destroy the surface when this call fails instead of leaving
the surface around and producing memory-leaks.
Instead of returning -1 on failure and 0 on success, I made it return the
new ID as this seems more appropriate. We can directly use it when calling
it with new_id==0.
Signed-off-by: David Herrmann <dh.herrmann@googlemail.com>
Provide a slot for keyboard modifier state inside wl_keyboard for
implementations to update, and use this to send wl_keyboard:;modifier
events whenever the keyboard or pointer focus changes.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Stone <daniel@fooishbar.org>