Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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Store position and size of windows before going fullscreen. This is more
efficient than arrange() and also works with floating windows
All the clients keep their original position because arrange() isn't
used after quitting fullscreen
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Some code has been borrowed from the smartBorders patch
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This fixes the window size of old games in Wine.
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This is used by wtype.
Also properly cleanup keyboards. Without wl_list_remove(&kb->link) dwl
crashed after using wtype 2-3 times.
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It allows clients such as swayidle and chat applications to monitor user
idle time.
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Because maprequest immediately calls wl_list_insert(&fstack, &c->flink),
in the following call to setmon(), the selclient() which is passed to
focusclient() as the old client is actually the newly mapped client, and
the real old one is never deactivated. You can see this by, for example,
opening Chromium's devtools, then spawning a terminal. The background of
the focused line in the devtools doesn't change from light blue to grey.
We can't just remove wl_list_insert(&fstack, &c->flink) from maprequest,
because calling wl_list_remove in focusclient() with a client that has
not been added to the list causes a segmentation fault.
Therefore we fix the focusclient call by not passing it the old client
every time, but instead using the wlroots function that gets the focused
surface and deactivate that, like in TinyWL.
This also avoids getting the selected client and passing it to
focusclient() on every call unnecessarily, and will allow removing
shouldfocusclients in a future commit by checking if old is a layer
surface instead.
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It makes wl-clipboard work properly in neovim, without having to create
a transparent surface that steals focus and causes flickering. It's also
required for clipman.
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The code in this else completely freezes my system when I run the
swayidle command to replicate xset dpms force off. No idea if it works
on multiple monitors, but for now avoid running when there's 1 monitor.
Also remove the comment with the function name in sway.
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Since wlr_output_enable doesn't have any effect before finishing all the
procedure, a little hack allows to make use of focusmon(), which must
know the latest in about which output is currently disabled
Also improve performance in focusmon() and cleaner code in
outputmgrapplyortest()
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When there's no monitors left, prevent the while in cleanupmon() to
become an infinite loop
Also switch to the left monitors instead of the right
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With the recent changes in output-management, the extra argument in
closemon() would be needed only when unplugging the monitor, so it isn't
worth it anymore. Also now is more efficient.
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Since focusmon() now never focuses disabled monitors, there's no need to
focus the disabled monitor first
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m->link.next leads to errors if the monitor to disable doesn't have a
"next" (right) monitor and is currently focused. dirtmon() does more
checks.
In some previous commits m->link.next is told to be left monitor, which
is wrong
Also focusclient() explicitly checks for disabled monitors (this fixes
in case of more than one disabled monitor)
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Focus the top client on newmon, which we know for sure that it isn't
going to be unplugged or disabled and actually set that as the focused
monitor to move the focus. This is necessary to prevent crash when
disabling monitors with the output-management patch.
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Focus newmon, which we know for sure that it isn't be unplugged or
disabled
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Before this, pressing mod+comma or mod+period (focusmon function) moved
the focus to disabed monitors. Now, all disabled monitors are skipped
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To the nearest monitor to the left of the disabled one
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into handleUnplug
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This allows to fix output-management: move clients to the monitor on the
left of the disabled one, instead of the leftmost (which might happen to
be the disabled one)
Also using wl_list_foreach() and then brake after the first iteration is
ugly and inefficient
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When using wlr-randr every monitor's configuration is reevaluated, so it
must check which monitors are actually being disabled. The only way to
correctly do that is to compare the names.
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Just focus a "safe" monitor before trying to to anything risky
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http://olidata.stivvo01.com:3000/Stivvo01/dwl into output-management
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When a monitor is disabled with wlr_randr, all clients on that monitor
aren't lost but they are moved to the leftmost monitor with the same
method that handles monitor hot unplug
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Separate oputput movement from cleanupmon
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Move sgeom assignment
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There is no need to repeat this. This needs to be reculalculated in my
output-management implementation too, and since I'm already calling
updatemons, this patch avoids having to repeat the assignment again.
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It allows clients such as wlr-randr to configure the display.
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When unplugging a monitor, each client is moved to the same tag number
as before on the new monitor
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Floating widndows with "x < removed monitor's width" aren't resized
(they used to disappear in negative coordinates).
Actually delete monitors when they are unplugged, recalculate sgeom and
give a new monitor to clients that were on the removed one with setmon()
arrangefloat() funcion has been exploded to save iterations in
cleanupmon().
Also if a monitor that supports auto suspension is turned off, dwl will
count it as unplugged (it will become unreachable and all clients will
be moved to the leftmost monitor). However, if at least one monitor
isn't plugged in, dwl will still crash the same as before.
Unlike sway, when the output configuration is changed and restored,
(unplug + plug the same monitor for example) previous application
positions aren't kept. This is due to the fact that on sway every
workspace is unique among all monitors.
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