If we have one global filter, one pointer may change the filter value and
affect another pointer.
Reproduceable effect:
blackbox and xterm, start dragging xterm then click anywhere with the other
pointer (attached to different masterd device!). The button release resets
the filter[Motion_Filter(button)] value, thus stopping dragging and no event
is sent to the client anymore.
Having the filters set per device gets around this.
In some cases (e.g. using x2x) the previous model broke, with a window ending
not counting down to 0 anymore. Special treatment for NotifyUngrab seems to
help here.
Current solution: If a NotifyGrab is to be sent ignore it. If a NotifyUngrab
enter is sent, only adjust the semaphore if it is on 0. Likewise, do the same
for a NotifyUngrab leave if the semaphore is on 1. This seems to work alright
so far.
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.
FixKeyState needs to be able to handle XI events, otherwise we get "impossible
keyboard events" on server zaps and other special key combos.
(cherry picked from commit 5ee409794e)
In some cases a button press may activate a passive core grab. If the client
owning the passive grab already has a core grab on another device, don't
actually activate it. Otherwise the client gets two simultaneous passive
core grabs, and may never ungrab the device again (only if the other grab uses
GrabModeSync).
Reproducable: fire up gnome-session, open up gnome-terminal. Click with the
ClientPointer onto the window decoration, then click with another pointer onto
an application icon in the panel. Drag the icon out, release the button and
voila - you just lost your second mouse.
This is a half-assed attempt at getting rid of some enter-leave problems. When
a grab is activated, the events didn't get sent before, leading to interesting
results. This commit papers over it but doesn't actually fix it properly. The
whole enter/leave (focusin/out) structure needs to be ripped out and changed
for multiple devices.
* dix/events.c, include/dix.h:
(UpdateSpriteForScreen): added this to update the mouse sprite context
when we switch from a pScreen to another.
* mi/mipointer.c:
(miPointerWarpCursor): as we are switching to a new pScreen,
don't forget to update the mouse sprite context.
Let the drivers only generate XI events and put those into the event queue.
When processing events, generate core events as needed. This fixes a number of
problems with XKB and the DIX in general.
The previous approach was to put core events and XI events as separate events
into the event queue. When being processed, the server had no knowledge of
them coming from the same device state change. Anything that would then change
the state of the device accordingly was in danger of changing it twice,
leading to some funny (i.e. not funny at all) results.
Emulating core events while processing XI events fixes this, there is only one
path that actually changes the device state now. Although we have to be
careful when replaying events from synced devices, otherwise we may lose
events.
Note: XI has precedence over core for passive grabs, but core events are
delivered to the client first.
This removes the wrapping added in 340911d724
We need it unconditionally in a few places, and the rest checked for NULL and
then set it to VCK anyway. So, fixing up all callers to appreciate the defined
return value.
GenericEvents can't be parsed to keyButtonPointer, and there's no guarantee
that it has a time field anyway. PlayReleasedEvent needs to store the millis
when we know it (core events, XI event) and just re-use them for GenericEvents.
Yes, this is a hack. But it looks like the time has zero significance anyway.
The device state needs to be changed while processing the XI event. Core
events are always processed after XI, so by then the device is already set up
properly. However, we now rely on DeviceButtonMotionMask to be equal to
ButtonMotionMask. It already is, but stick a big fat warning in so nobody
attempts to change it.
This commit disables XKB for the VCK, thus essentially for all devices.
Temporarily anyway.