Anything in dev->key, dev->valuator etc. of a MD must always be a copy of the
original class. The intial classes of an MD (the ones set up before an SD is
attached) as well, as we may have to restore them if no SD is attached
anymore.
Turns out it's really really hard synchronising device state across multiple
duplicated events if they all share the same struct. So instead of doing so,
when the SD changes deep-copy all it's classes into the MD. The MD then has
the same capabilities, but the state can be set separately. This should fix
xkb, key state, repeat etc. problems.
Updating the device state allows us to remove the SwitchCoreKeyboard from the
event gathering, it's all done during event processing now.
The master needs to have the same devPrivate as the slave, in case a client
issues a request that goes down to the driver.
Example: if a driver wants to ring the keyboard bell, it'll pick a keyboard.
The KeyClassPtr will direct it to the matching method in the driver, but
because the MD doesn't have the devPrivate set the driver segfaults.
Even if all drivers were updated to not dereference the nullpointer, nothing
would actually ever happen.
To avoid this, we flip the master's public.devPrivate to the last SDs
devPrivate.
POE now only deals with processing the event and calling the appropriate
delivery methods. Actually modifying the device state is done in
UpdateDeviceState. This separation should make it easier to avoid setting the
state twice when master events are processed.
If a slave device is attached to a master device, then we need to send a
mapping notify to the client.
Mapping notify needs to be sent if
- different slave device but on same master
- different master
This gives you funny behaviour with the ClientPointer. When a
MappingNotify is sent to the client, the client usually responds with a
GetKeyboardMapping. This will retrieve the ClientPointer's keyboard mapping,
regardless of which keyboard sent the last mapping notify request. So
depending on the CP setting, your keyboard may change layout in each app...
Haven't quite figured out yet how to make these repeats work. Because we share
the class between devices, the key state is already set when we process the
master device's event, causing a repeat on each event.
This can happen if we check for a passive core grab and our device is a
floating slave device. Doesn't really change anything as SDs can't send core
events but it stops the server from segfaulting.
Each time a different slave device sends through a master, an
DeviceClassesChangedEvent is enqueued. When this event is processed, all
classes of the matching master device are changed, and the event is sent to
the clients.
Next time the master is queried, it thus shows the evclasses of the last slave
device. The original classes are stored in the devPrivates.
TODO: if all slave devices are removed, the master's original classes need to
be restored.
For pointers: don't try to set master->valuator fields if there is no master.
For keyboards: check if device is valid before trying to access the fields in
miPointerGetScreen (btw. this disables DGA events for floating keyboards).
Also stop the hideous number of ErrorFs if we request the paired device for a
floating dev.
Subject: [PATCH] fix some performance gaps in Xace
The XaceHook function is used in several hotpaths.
The problem with it (performance wise) is twofold:
* The XaceHook function has a big switch() statement for the hook number in it
* The XaceHook function uses varargs to reassemble the final dispatch arguments again
Both are expensive operations... for something that is known at compile time
This patch turns the hotpath XaceHook call into a direct call to avoid
the switch and varargs; this gives me over 10% performance gain
on the x11perf benchmark.
The code in connect_hook incorrectly checks for dbus_bus_request_name failure.
The dbus_bus_request_name error indicator is -1, not 0. This leads
to subsequent assertion failure in libdbus.