If a fullscreen window with GLFW_DECORATED set had its XDG decorations
changed to client mode by the compositor, it would seemingly receive
GLFW fallback decorations as if it was windowed mode.
This is possibly related to #2001.
Note that the handling of configure events, acks and commits is still
not ideal. This is just a small step in, hopefully, a good direction.
Fullscreen toggling via glfwSetWindowMonitor now works on Weston, but
mostly incidentally.
If the xdg_toplevel has a decoration, we need to wait for its first
configure event as well before we are allowed to attach the first
buffer.
It seems racy to assume that this will always happen inside the first
surface configure sequence, so this commit makes that condition
explicit. This may turn out to have been overly defensive.
Refer to the XDG decoration mode (or the lack of one) directly instead
of setting a boolean in a struct meant for the fallback decorations.
This makes things a bit more verbose but is in preparation for
a refactoring of all decoration paths.
When showing a window that had already been shown once (and so already
had its shell objects), GLFW would attach a new buffer and commit it
before waiting for the next configure event. This was a violation of
the XDG shell protocol.
This was allowed to work as intended on GNOME and KDE without error.
However wlroots based compositors would (correctly) emit an error.
Unfortunately, I haven't been able to find a way to get both KDE, GNOME
and Sway to send the configure event we need in order to map the
wl_surface again while keeping our existing shell objects, so with this
commit we now create them for each call to glfwShowWindow and destroy
them for each call to glfwHideWindow.
Fixes#1268
If a window was created as maximized, or created as hidden and then
iconified or maximized before first being shown, that state was lost and
the window was shown as restored.
Window iconfication and maximization events were being emitted before
xdg_surface::configure, making it possible for user code to indirectly
commit surface changes from those event callbacks before
xdg_surface::ack_configure.
This postpones those events until after the ack has been sent.
Content scale events would be emitted when a window surface entered or
left an output, but not when one of a window's current outputs had its
scale changed.
GLFW would report a monitor as connected each time its wl_output
received an update, for example if its scale changed.
This would also cause the monitor to be added to the monitor array
again, causing glfwTerminate to segfault when it attempted to destroy
its already destroyed wl_output.
This is a temporary local fix to have updates to GLFW_DECORATED mostly
work as intended. The whole decoration state machine needs to be
restructured, but not by this commit.
The size limits set on our XDG surface did not include the sizes of the
fallback decorations on all sides, when in use. This led to its content
area being too small.
Related to #2127
The handler for xdg_toplevel::configure treated the provided size as the
content area size when instead it is the size of the bounding rectangle
of the wl_surface and all its subsurfaces.
This caused the fallback decorations to try positioning themselves
outside themselves, causing feedback loops during interactive resizing.
Fixes#1991Fixes#2115Closes#2127
Related to #1914
The surface was resized and the size event was emitted before we had
sent xdg_surface::ack_configure. If user code then called some GLFW
function that commited the surface, those changes would all get applied
to the wrong configure event.
This postpones size changes until after the ack.
The internal maximization state was not updated when an event was
received that the user had changed the maximization state of a window,
and no maximization events were emitted.
This affected both the GLFW_MAXIMIZED attribute and glfwRestoreWindow.
These changes make GLFW fullscreen more consistent, but unfortunately
also make GLFW even more oblivious to user-initiated XDG shell
fullscreen changes.
Fixes#1995
By using window class atoms, we only need to mention each window class
name once, also removing the need to define _GLFW_WNDCLASSNAME. It can
still be defined by the user as before.
The current window procedure needs to deal with messages both for user
created windows and the hidden helper window.
This commit separates out the device message handling of the helper
window, allowing both window procedures to be less complicated.
GLFW did not restore the previous Xlib error handler when removing its
own, instead resetting to the default handler.
This commit saves and restores the previous error handler.
None of this is thread-safe or could ever be.
Fixes#2108
The joystick code did not distinguish between the allocation status of
the GLFW joystick object and whether it is connection to an OS level
joystick object.
These are now tracked separately.
Fixes#2092
The modifier bits for lock keys were only set when the corresponding key
was reported as held down or latched, but not when it was released and
locked.
This avoids glfwCreateWindow emitting GLFW_FEATURE_UNAVAILABLE or
GLFW_FEATURE_UNIMPLEMENTED on Wayland because shared code was calling
unimplemented or unavailable platform functions during final setup.
It also makes it consistent with the final setup of full screen windows.
There will not currently be more than one set of threading or timer APIs
selected regardless of how many window systems are enabled, so there is
no need for this extra complexity.
Versions of wayland-scanner prior to 1.17.91 named every global array of
wl_interface pointers 'types', making it impossible to combine several
unmodified private-code files into a single compilation unit.
This overrides that name with a macro for each file, allowing them to
coexist.
Fixes#2016Closes#2032
The code assumed that at least some data would be received via the INCR
mechanism and that, as a result, the string buffer would be allocated.
Bug found by Clang static analysis.
The clipboard string should not be freed on SelectionClear. The user
may have received it from glfwGetClipboardString and it should remain
valid until the next call to a public clipboard string function.
The Wayland backend was the only one where half the window and input
related code was in the init module. As those bits want to share more
utility code with the window module, the interface between them grows.
To prevent that, this gathers nearly all window and input related code
into the window module.
The code assumed that all data offers were selections that supported
plaintext UTF-8.
The initial data offer events are now handled almost tolerably. Only
selection data offers are used for clipboard string and only if they
provide plaintext UTF-8. Drag and drop data offers are now rejected as
soon as they enter a surface.
Related to #2040
The string pointer used to write the contents of our clipboard data
offer was never updated, causing it to repeat parts of the beginning of
the string until the correct number of bytes had been written.
Emitting an error for one specific type of failure in retrieving the
correct name for a display is not very useful, especially when
initialization is otherwise unaffected.
There should be a path for information like that but this isn't it.
Fixes#1791
Operations that take an instance handle should be passed the handle of
whatever module we are inside instead of blindly passing the handle of
the executable.
This commit makes GLFW retrieve its own instance on initialization.
This makes the most difference for window classes, which are
per-instance. Using the executable instance led to name conflicts if
there were several copies of GLFW in a single process.
Note that having this is still a bad idea unless you know what things to
avoid, and those things are mostly platform-specific. This is partly
because the library wasn't designed for it and partly because it needs
to save, update and restore various per-process and per-session settings
like current context and video mode.
However, multiple simultaneous copies of GLFW in a single Win32 process
should now at least initialize, like is already the case on other
platforms.
Fixes#469Fixes#1296Fixes#1395
Related to #927
Related to #1885
Alt+PrtSc emits a different scancode than just PrtSc. Since the GLFW
API assumes each key corresponds to only one scancode, this cannot be
added to the keycodes array.
Instead we replace the scancode at the point of entry.
Fixes#1993
This change broke key names for dead keys, because that depends on
the effect on the global state of simulating two key presses.
Issue found by CTest tests.
Reverts #2018