Yes, this is an ugly piece mess of #ifdefs, but it beats having two nearly
identical functions.
Signed-off-by: Peter Hutterer <peter.hutterer@who-t.net>
Everything goes through XKB's Process{Keyboard,Pointer}Event on its way
through to ProcessOtherEvent now, so get rid of the old, useless functions.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Stone <daniel@fooishbar.org>
Signed-off-by: Peter Hutterer <peter.hutterer@who-t.net>
Instead of always keeping two copies of the keymap, only generate the
core keymap from the XKB keymap when we really need to, and use the XKB
keymap as the canonical keymap.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Stone <daniel@fooishbar.org>
Signed-off-by: Peter Hutterer <peter.hutterer@who-t.net>
Modifiers get cleared by the XKB code when we drop down into core input
processing, so just delete the dead code path to simplify things a bit.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Stone <daniel@fooishbar.org>
Signed-off-by: Peter Hutterer <peter.hutterer@who-t.net>
We already have state fully stored within XKB, so instead of duplicating it,
just generate the values to send to clients when required.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Stone <daniel@fooishbar.org>
Signed-off-by: Peter Hutterer <peter.hutterer@who-t.net>
No more #ifdef XKB, because you can't disable the build, and no more
noXkbExtension either.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Stone <daniel@fooishbar.org>
Signed-off-by: Peter Hutterer <peter.hutterer@who-t.net>
If the MD's lastSlave was a devices with custom axes ranges, then a
WarpPointer would position the cursor at the wrong location. A WarpPointer
request provides screen coordinates and these coordinates were scaled to the
device range before warping.
This patch consists of two parts:
1) in the WarpPointer handling, get the lastSlave and post the event through
this device.
2) assume that WarpPointer coordinates are always in screen coordinates and
scale them to device coordinates in GPE before continuing. Note that this
breaks device-coordinate based XWarpDevicePointer calls (for which the spec
isn't nailed down yet anyway) until a better solution is found.
X.Org Bug 19297 <http://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=19297>
Signed-off-by: Peter Hutterer <peter.hutterer@who-t.net>
This commit moves the focus handling from events.c into enterleave.c and
implements a model similar to the core enter/leave model.
For a full description of the model, see:
http://lists.freedesktop.org/archives/xorg/2008-December/041740.html
This commit also gets rid of the focusinout array in the WindowRec, ditching
it in favour of a local array that keeps the current focus window for each
device.
Signed-off-by: Peter Hutterer <peter.hutterer@who-t.net>
A grep on xorg/* revealed there's no consumer of this define.
Quote Alan Coopersmith:
"The consumer was in past versions of the headers now located
in proto/x11proto - for instance, in X11R6.0's xc/include/Xproto.h,
all the event definitions were only available if NEED_EVENTS were
defined, and all the reply definitions required NEED_REPLIES.
Looks like Xproto.h dropped them by X11R6.3, which didn't have
the #ifdef's anymore, so these are truly ancient now."
Signed-off-by: Peter Hutterer <peter.hutterer@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Adam Jackson <ajax@redhat.com>
Save in a few special cases, _X_EXPORT should not be used in C source
files. Instead, it should be used in headers, and the proper C source
include that header. Some special cases are symbols that need to be
shared between modules, but not expected to be used by external drivers,
and symbols that are accessible via LoaderSymbol/dlopen.
This patch also adds conditionally some new sdk header files, depending
on extensions enabled. These files were added to match pattern for
other extensions/modules, that is, have the headers "deciding" symbol
visibility in the sdk. These headers are:
o Xext/panoramiXsrv.h, Xext/panoramiX.h
o fbpict.h (unconditionally)
o vidmodeproc.h
o mioverlay.h (unconditionally, used only by xaa)
o xfixes.h (unconditionally, symbols required by dri2)
LoaderSymbol and similar functions now don't have different prototypes,
in loaderProcs.h and xf86Module.h, so that both headers can be included,
without the need of defining IN_LOADER.
xf86NewInputDevice() device prototype readded to xf86Xinput.h, but
not exported (and with a comment about it).
This is the biggest "visibility" patch. Instead of doing a "export"
symbol on demand, export everything in the sdk, so that if some module
fails due to an unresolved symbol, it is because it is using a symbol
not in the sdk.
Most exported symbols shouldn't really be made visible, neither
advertised in the sdk, as they are only used by a single shared object.
Symbols in the sdk (or referenced in sdk macros), but not defined
anywhere include:
XkbBuildCoreState()
XkbInitialMap
XkbXIUnsupported
XkbCheckActionVMods()
XkbSendCompatNotify()
XkbDDXFakePointerButton()
XkbDDXApplyConfig()
_XkbStrCaseCmp()
_XkbErrMessages[]
_XkbErrCode
_XkbErrLocation
_XkbErrData
XkbAccessXDetailText()
XkbNKNDetailMaskText()
XkbLookupGroupAndLevel()
XkbInitAtoms()
XkbGetOrderedDrawables()
XkbFreeOrderedDrawables()
XkbConvertXkbComponents()
XkbWriteXKBSemantics()
XkbWriteXKBLayout()
XkbWriteXKBKeymap()
XkbWriteXKBFile()
XkbWriteCFile()
XkbWriteXKMFile()
XkbWriteToServer()
XkbMergeFile()
XkmFindTOCEntry()
XkmReadFileSection()
XkmReadFileSectionName()
InitExtInput()
xf86CheckButton()
xf86SwitchCoreDevice()
RamDacSetGamma()
RamDacRestoreDACValues()
xf86Bpp
xf86ConfigPix24
xf86MouseCflags[]
xf86SupportedMouseTypes[]
xf86NumMouseTypes
xf86ChangeBusIndex()
xf86EntityEnter()
xf86EntityLeave()
xf86WrapperInit()
xf86RingBell()
xf86findOptionBoolean()
xf86debugListOptions()
LoadSubModuleLocal()
LoaderSymbolLocal()
getInt10Rec()
xf86CurrentScreen
xf86ReallocatePciResources()
xf86NewSerialNumber()
xf86RandRSetInitialMode()
fbCompositeSolidMask_nx1xn
fbCompositeSolidMask_nx8888x0565C
fbCompositeSolidMask_nx8888x8888C
fbCompositeSolidMask_nx8x0565
fbCompositeSolidMask_nx8x0888
fbCompositeSolidMask_nx8x8888
fbCompositeSrc_0565x0565
fbCompositeSrc_8888x0565
fbCompositeSrc_8888x0888
fbCompositeSrc_8888x8888
fbCompositeSrcAdd_1000x1000
fbCompositeSrcAdd_8000x8000
fbCompositeSrcAdd_8888x8888
fbGeneration
fbIn
fbOver
fbOver24
fbOverlayGeneration
fbRasterizeEdges
fbRestoreAreas
fbSaveAreas
composeFunctions
VBEBuildVbeModeList()
VBECalcVbeModeIndex()
TIramdac3030CalculateMNPForClock()
shadowBufPtr
shadowFindBuf()
miRRGetScreenInfo()
RRSetScreenConfig()
RRModePruneUnused()
PixmanImageFromPicture()
extern int miPointerGetMotionEvents()
miClipPicture()
miRasterizeTriangle()
fbPush1toN()
fbInitializeBackingStore()
ddxBeforeReset()
SetupSprite()
InitSprite()
DGADeliverEvent()
SPECIAL CASES
o defined as _X_INTERNAL
xf86NewInputDevice()
o defined as static
fbGCPrivateKey
fbOverlayScreenPrivateKey
fbScreenPrivateKey
fbWinPrivateKey
o defined in libXfont.so, but declared in xorg/dixfont.h
GetGlyphs()
QueryGlyphExtents()
QueryTextExtents()
ParseGlyphCachingMode()
InitGlyphCaching()
SetGlyphCachingMode()
Device events always need to be delivered, core events only in some cases.
Let's keep them completely separate so we can adjust core event delivery.
Signed-off-by: Peter Hutterer <peter.hutterer@redhat.com>
We need them for each window, every time a window is allocated. Storing them
in a devPrivate is the wrong thing to do.
This also removes the unused ENTER_LEAVE_SEMAPHORE_ISSET macro.
Signed-off-by: Peter Hutterer <peter.hutterer@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Stone <daniel@fooishbar.org>
grab == devgrab anyway, this is a leftover from the time when we had two
different grabs per device (core and XI grab).
Signed-off-by: Peter Hutterer <peter.hutterer@redhat.com>
Really, this was a bad idea. It's not security, the UI features that would
have been cool (e.g. clicking through windows) aren't implemented anyway, and
there's nothing you can't achieve just by using plain XI anyway.
Requires inputproto 1.9.99.6.
Two corrections
1. the "detail" field has NotifyVirtual, etc., not the "mode" field. This was
a clear bug.
2. don't set/unset the flags for NotifyGrab or NotifyUngrab. Clients are
expected to deal with multiple enter/leave events per window if the mode is
not NotifyNormal.
Testable with TCL menu boxes (such as used in gitk):
tk_optionMenu .menu globVar Val1 Val2 Val3 ValJunk
pack .menu
Thanks to Michel Dänzer for pointing this out.
This fixes a severe issue - when the client died the event mask didn't get
unregistered and a future event would dereference dangling pointers. By
storing the event masks in the resource system we can free them when the
client dies.
Dereferencing into dev->valuator could crash the server, although it looks
like I could only reproduce this by having a keyboard send an event after it
was created and the WM was still replaying. Or so.
device->button->down used to be a 32-byte bitmask with one bit for each
button. This has changed into a 256-byte array, with one byte assigned for
each button. Some of the callers were still using this array as a bitmask
however, this is fixed with this patch.
Thanks to Keith Packard for pointing this out. See also:
http://lists.freedesktop.org/archives/xorg/2008-June/036202.html
RealizeCursor should be called when the cursor is allocated. However, when the
root cursor is allocated, no devices exist yet, and thus RealizeCursor is
never called. This may lead to segfaults lateron in DDXes like Xnest that
actually need to do something for each cursor, and lateron rely on that
DDX-specific data for each cursor has been initialized.
Instead of a simple counter, use bits to keep track of which device is where
etc. When device enters a window (or sets focus), the bit matching the device
is set, when it leaves again, it is unset. If there are 0 bits set, then
Leave/Enter/Focus events may be sent to the client.
Same theory as before, but this should get around the insanity with
Grab/Ungrab special cases. Those cases are basically untested though.
If an pointer event is being processed during a device grab, don't deliver it
to the focus window, even if the device has a focus class. Reason being that
some pointers may have a focus class, thus killing drag-and-drop.
Add Prox events to the if-clauses with the other events
that are usually sent from the input devices.
Ensure that the event deliverers won't try to deliver
events of type '0' (some extended events doesn't have
an equivalent core-type)
Small modification by Peter Hutterer.
Signed-off-by: Peter Hutterer <peter@cs.unisa.edu.au>
The latter is used to increase the amount of allocated memory for the event
list. This will be needed for ClassesChangedEvents that can be of more or less
arbitrary size (larger than 32 anyway).
Rather than letting the DDX allocate the events, allocate them once in the DIX
and just pass it around when needed.
DDX should call GetEventList() to obtain this list and then pass it into
Get{Pointer|Keyboard}Events.
The correct thing would be to return the ClientPointer. However, if the client
for some reason has a core grab on another device (e.g. as result of a passive
grab), return the coordinates of the grabbed device instead.
This makes the use of nautilus a bit saner.
If the window being changed is set as the motion hint window for any device,
the device's motion hint window is set to NULL. Which is kinda what the old
code did, except that it did it with only the VCP.
This is a significant shift in how input events are perceived. The common
approach was to treat a core event as a different entity than the XI event.
This could result in the XI event being delivered to a different client than
the core event. This doesn't work nicely if they come from the same device.
Instead, we treat an input event as a single event, that is delivered through
two separate APIs. So when delivering an event, we first try the XI event,
then the core event. If the window want's neither, we go to the parent and
repeat. Once either core or XI has been delivered, the processing stops.
Important: Different to the previous method, if a client registers for core
button events, the parent window will not get XI events. This should only
cause problems when you're mixing core and XI events, so don't do that!
Generic events don't fit into this yet, they cause me headaches.
This should restore the correct passive grab processing. When checking for
passive grabs, the core event is emulated and we check first for XI grabs on
the window, then for core grabs. Regardless of which event activates the grab,
the XI event is stored in the device's EQ.
When replaying the event, we take the XI event and replay it on the next
window, again including the emulation of the core event.
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.
delivery of events to windows and clients.
This is tentative. It's likely that an additional last-resort hook will
be necessary for code that calls TryClientEvents or WriteEventsToClient
directly. It's also possible that new xace machinery will be necessary
to classify events and pull useful resource ID's out of them.
The failure case also needs some thinking through. Should event delivery
"succeed" or should it report undeliverable?
Finally, XKB appears to call WriteToClient to pass events. Sigh.
We shouldn't be able to restrict events like Expose, etc. with device based
ACLs. So we just ignore all non-input events when checking for permissions.
A passive core grab doesn't specify the device, and is thus created with the
ClientPointer as device. When this grab is activated later, don't actually
activate the grab on the grab device, but rather change the device to the one
that caused the grab to activate. Same procedure for keyboards.
Makes core apps _A LOT_ more useable and reduces the need to set the
ClientPointer.
Only applies to core grabs!
We need to do this to update the sprites x/y coordinate before we assemble a
button event. Absolute devices may send a buttonEvent with valuators attached.
If we don't update the sprite before assembling the event, the valuators are
lost and the button press is delivered to the previous position of the device.
Doesn't have any effect on relative devices.
We need this to allow extensions to fill in extra data for an event before it
is sent to the client. This is probably to be used like
FillUpEventsFromWindow().
This is definitely necessary in CheckDeviceGrabAndHintWindow (thanks to Paulo
Zanoni for spotting it). We're resetting it everywhere else too, just to be
save.
Device drivers flush their buttons on device init and cause a button down
event to be generated. If we unconditionally decrease the buttons, we won't be
able to ever get a passive device grab.
Format documentation for CheckDeviceGrabs to make it readable.
(cherry picked from commit 3e894974cd)
Conflicts:
Xi/exevents.c
Is set when passive grab is implicit as result of a ButtonPress event. If this
is the case, we need to store the XI mask as well as the core mask to ensure
delivery of XI events during the grab's lifetime.
Remove all core grabs on other devices when client issues a GrabPointer or
GrabKeyboard request. Let's assume that the client really only wants one
device to interact, so this seems like a reasonable solution.
Device drivers flush their buttons on device init and cause a button down
event to be generated. If we unconditionally decrease the buttons, we won't be
able to ever get a passive device grab.
Format documentation for CheckDeviceGrabs to make it readable.
This quickfixes event delivery problems with XI events when a grab was on.
deviceMask is only used when the grab was from a ButtonPress to preserve
potential XI event masks.
This is not an ideal solution but it works until I have time to work on
PassiveGrabs.
Add XGE handling in DeliverGrabbedEvent.
We can now grab something selecting XGE events, but the current code is a
bit messy and doesn't work too well yet.
Add RawDeviceEvent (pointers only for now).
This commit changes the event queue to use EventLists instead of xEvent
arrays. Only EQ is affected, event delivery still uses xEvent* (look for
comment in mieqProcessInputEvent).
RawDeviceEvents deliver driver information to the client, without clipping or
acceleration.
If we don't do this, a device that is paired before a sprite has been
initialized for the paired device will not actually get the right sprite and
segfault the server on focus events. Happens for the VCK.
This adds (unconditional) support for the GE extension. Anything from now on
that sends events in MPX will have to use the GE extension. No GE, no MPX
events. GE is not actually used yet from anywhere with this commit.
You will need to update x11proto, xextproto, libX11, libXext and xcb to the
matching xge branches. Things will _NOT_ work without the updated protocol
headers and libraries.
Requires moving the spriteTrace into the DeviceIntRec and adjusting a few
functions to take in device argument, most notably XYToWindow().
Cursor rendering on the second screen is busted.
arbitrary X status codes instead of just TRUE/FALSE.
The dix layer in most cases still does not propagate the return value of
XACE hooks back to the client, however. There is more error propagation
work to do.
Core enter/leave events with detail Notify{Ancestor|Inferior|Nonlinear} are
only sent for the first/last pointer to enter/leave. Events with detail
Notify{Nonlinear}Virtual are sent at all times, but not to those windows that
currently have one or more pointers inside their boundaries.
Send EnterNotify when first device enters the window, LeaveNotify when the
last device leaves the window. Additional devices will not cause additional
Enter/LeaveNotifies.
Calloc cursor struct to ensure devPrivates are zeroed out and don't
increase the refcnt for devices automatically when allocating a new
cursor. Use new DeviceIsPointerType() to detect if device is a pointer
_before_ device has been activated and can thus be identified and set
up grab functions accordingly. This way we can increase the refcnt
when we get a pointer grab.