This change allows the tablet tool button to be used for floating mod
resize. In addition, it attempts to ensure that tablet tool events are
consistent such that tablet v2 events and pointer events will never be
interleaved, and such that the tool buttons count will never fall out of
sync and cause tool button emulation to break.
Some of this logic is similar to what is done for tablet tool tip, but
not quite identical, because of the complication that we have to deal
with multiple inputs that can overlap eachother.
Fixes#7036.
This might be the wrong fix, but the crash is happening because the ->data
field on an xwayland surface is NULL. A NULL data field is normal for
unmanaged surfaces, however it seems clients can do weird things: They can
create a cursor lock on a regular xwayland surface then make it unmanaged
by calling override_redirect. In this case, the xwayland server should
destroy the cursor lock, which is does, but does so in the wrong order
making it try to dereference a NULL pointer after sway has acknowledged
its new unmanaged status.
```
(gdb) bt full
0 0x000055fd91934861 in warp_to_constraint_cursor_hint (cursor=0x55fd93486c00)
at ../sway/input/cursor.c:1243
sy = 605
lx = 6.9527431433545762e-310
sx = 1272
view = 0x0
con = 0x7ffd1cdfe400
ly = -6.949595189996421e+59
constraint = 0x55fd93e7faa0
1 0x000055fd91934976 in handle_constraint_destroy (listener=0x55fd93f0fd58, data=0x55fd93e7faa0)
at ../sway/input/cursor.c:1266
sway_constraint = 0x55fd93f0fd30
constraint = 0x55fd93e7faa0
cursor = 0x55fd93486c00
2 0x00007fda8275bf6e in wl_signal_emit_mutable () at /usr/lib/libwayland-server.so.0
3 0x00007fda82e57016 in pointer_constraint_destroy (constraint=0x55fd93e7faa0)
at ../subprojects/wlroots/types/wlr_pointer_constraints_v1.c:49
4 0x00007fda82e570dc in pointer_constraint_destroy_resource (resource=0x55fd933cf8f0)
at ../subprojects/wlroots/types/wlr_pointer_constraints_v1.c:66
constraint = 0x55fd93e7faa0
5 0x00007fda8275d8ba in () at /usr/lib/libwayland-server.so.0
6 0x00007fda8275f6a9 in wl_resource_destroy () at /usr/lib/libwayland-server.so.0
7 0x00007fda82e56fb3 in resource_destroy (client=0x55fd93ea52e0, resource=0x55fd933cf8f0)
at ../subprojects/wlroots/types/wlr_pointer_constraints_v1.c:39
8 0x00007fda81d8f4f6 in () at /usr/lib/libffi.so.8
9 0x00007fda81d8bf5e in () at /usr/lib/libffi.so.8
10 0x00007fda81d8eb73 in ffi_call () at /usr/lib/libffi.so.8
11 0x00007fda8275aada in () at /usr/lib/libwayland-server.so.0
12 0x00007fda8275f01c in () at /usr/lib/libwayland-server.so.0
13 0x00007fda8275d9e2 in wl_event_loop_dispatch () at /usr/lib/libwayland-server.so.0
14 0x00007fda8275e197 in wl_display_run () at /usr/lib/libwayland-server.so.0
15 0x000055fd919264d3 in server_run (server=0x55fd919a3a80 <server>) at ../sway/server.c:320
16 0x000055fd91925457 in main (argc=1, argv=0x7ffd1cdfed98) at ../sway/main.c:411
verbose = false
debug = false
validate = false
allow_unsupported_gpu = false
config_path = 0x0
c = -1
```
previously, fullscreen global containers would grab cursor input
even if a shell-layer surface was on top of it
related issue: https://github.com/swaywm/sway/issues/6501
When emulating touch, the simulating_pointer_from_touch field is
set to true. It's switched back to false when a touch_up event is
received. However we need to ensure we always send a wl_pointer.frame
event following a group of other wl_pointer events.
Since a touch_frame event is always guaranteed to come after a group
of touch events, unset simulating_pointer_from_touch in the touch_frame
handler instead of the touch_up handler. Add a new field to know whether
the touch_frame handler should stop emulation.
get_current_time_msec is only used in cursor.c, so we can move it in and
make it static. This is primarily intended to avoid a symbol collision
with wlroots, which we unfortunately do not have a good solution for
yet.
Pending state is currently inlined directly in the container struct,
while the current state is in a state struct. A side-effect of this is
that it is not immediately obvious that pending double-buffered state is
accessed, nor is it obvious what state is double-buffered.
Instead, use the state struct for both current and pending.
There is no need to check for transactions at the end of every user
input, as the vast majority of input will not issue transactions. This
implementation can also hide where changes are made without an
appropriate transaction commit, as a future unrelated input would issue
the commit instead.
Instead, commit transactions in places where changes are made or are
likely to be made.
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
On warping to a cursor hint, update the pointer position we track as
well, so that on the next pointer rebase we don't send an unexpected
synthetic motion event to clients.
Fixes#5405.
Previously, we called output_disable prior to wlr_output_commit. This
mutates Sway's output state before the output commit actually succeeds.
This results in Sway's state getting out-of-sync with wlroots'.
An alternative fix [1] was to revert the changes made by output_disable
in case of failure. This is a little complicated. Instead, this patch
makes it so Sway's internal state is never changed before a successful
wlr_output commit.
We had two output flags: enabled and configured. However enabled was set
prior to the output becoming enabled, and was used to prevent the output
event handlers (specifically, the mode handler) from calling
apply_output_config again (infinite loop).
Rename enabled to enabling and use it exclusively for this purpose.
Rename configure to enabled, because that's what it really means.
[1]: https://github.com/swaywm/sway/pull/5521
Closes: https://github.com/swaywm/sway/issues/5483
Prior to this commit, a tablet device could trigger mouse button down
bindings if the pen was pressed on a surface that didn't bind tablet
handlers -- but it wouldn't if the surface did bind tablet handlers.
We should expose consistent behavior to users so that they don't have to
care about emulated vs. non-emulated input, so stop triggering bindings
for any non-pointer devices.
Previously, a tablet or touch device could report activity as a pointer
device if it went through pointer emulation. This commit refactors idle
sources to be consistently reported based on the type of the device that
generated an input event, and now how that input event is being
processed.
This commit makes `get_current_time_msec` correctly return milliseconds
as opposed to microseconds. It also considers the value of `tv_sec`, so
we don't lose occasionally go back in time by one second. Finally, the
function is moved into `util.c` so that it can be reused elsewhere
without having to consider these pitfalls.
We are not allowed to do what we did in #5222 and pass a `NULL` surface
wlr_seat_pointer_notify_enter(), and it's causing crashes when an
xdg-shell popup is active (see #5294 and swaywm/wlroots#2161).
Instead, solve #5220 using the new wlroots API introduced in
swaywm/wlroots#2217.
This commit moves tool tip event generation into seatops. In doing so,
some corner cases where we'd erroneously (but likely harmlessly)
generate both tablet and pointer events simultaneously are eliminated.
This is a tiny cleanup commit that renames `simulated_tool_tip_down` to
`simulating_pointer_from_tool_tip`, making it match
`simulating_pointer_from_touch`.
This is a better name since it makes it clear that it's the *pointer*
that's being simulated, not the tool tip.
The spec has this to say about sending events on confine creation:
Whenever the confinement is activated, it is guaranteed that the
surface the pointer is confined to will already have received pointer
focus and that the pointer will be within the region passed to the
request creating this object.
...and on region update:
If warped, a wl_pointer.motion event will be emitted, but no
wp_relative_pointer.relative_motion event.
Prior to this patch, sway did neither, and updated the hardware cursor
position without notifying the underlying surface until the next motion
event. This led to inconsistent results, especially in applications that
draw their own software cursor.
Currently, when tablet input exits a window during an implicit grab, it
passes focus to another window.
For instance, this is problematic when trying to drag a scrollbar, and
exiting the window — the scrollbar motion stops. Additionally,
without `focus_follows_mouse no`, the tablet passes focus to whatever
surface it goes over regardless of if there is an active implicit.
If the tablet is over a surface that does not bind tablet handlers, sway
will fall back to pointer emulation, and all of this works fine. It
probably should have consistent behavior between emulated and
not-emulated input, though.
This commit adds a condition for entering seatop_down when a tablet's
tool tip goes down, and exiting when it goes up. Since events won't be
routed through seatop_default, this prevents windows losing focus during
implicit grabs.
Closes#5302.
This is a small cleanup commit for removing `sway_tablet` parameters
from functions that already accept `sway_tablet_tool`, since the tablet
reference can be accessed through `tool->tablet`.
This commit renames `motion` and `axis` handlers to `pointer_motion` and
`pointer_axis`, respectively, to disambiguate them from their tablet
(and future touch) handlers. `button` is left as-is, as it is generic
across input devices.