This change only affects clients that are subscribed to events, which
should be the main cause of our problems.
In the common case (no buffered data) the behaviour doesn't change at
all: the message is sent directly, no ev_io / ev_timeout callback is
enabled. Once a write to a client's socket is not completed fully
(returns with EAGAIN error), we put the message in the tail of a queue
and init an ev_io callback and a corresponding timer. If the timer is
triggered first, the socket is closed and the client connection is
removed. If the socket becomes writeable before the timeout we either
reset the timer if we couldn't push all the buffered data or completely
remove it if everything was pushed.
We could also replace ipc_send_message() for all client connections in
i3, not just those subscribed to events.
Furthermore, we could limit the amount of messages stored and increase
the timeout (or use multiple timeouts): eg it's ok if a client is not
reading for 10 seconds and we are only holding 5KB of messages for them
but it is not ok if they are inactive for 5 seconds and we have 30MB of
messages held.
Closes#2999Closes#2539
This prohibits the usage of workspaces assigned to other outputs in
create_workspace_on_output.
Eg, with config:
workspace 1 output fake-0
workspace 2 output fake-0
and 2 screens workspace 2 would be used for the second screen even
though it is assigned to the first one.
Also introduces a test for workspace assignments that includes the case
described above and some tests that don't fail in the next branch.
fbce834b introduced a bug where scrolling over the decoration while
another container is focused would not focus the tabbed/stacked
container itself, but would instead move focus through the currently
focused container.
When moving a workspace to the current output by way of a rename, if the
current workspace is empty, it will be removed by `workspace_show`.
Attempting to restore focus to this removed workspace causes a crash.
Follow the pattern in workspace.c:996 to only restore the original focus if the
original workspace still exists.
Add a test to ensure that the renamed workspace moves to its appropriate
output and that a crash does not occur.
Fixes#3228
When we don't modify the focus we aren't risking giving focus to a
container behind the current fullscreen one.
_con_move_to_con can with ignore_focus is called through the swap
command or through con_move_to_workspace for floating containers. This
change shouldn't break the expectations of the callers there.
Fixes issue #3259.
- 'border toggle' now accepts an optional pixel argument which will be
ignored when switching to BS_NONE.
- 'border pixel' now defaults to 1 pixel instead of 2.
- Calling 'border normal' or 'border pixel' will use the configured
default_border_width if one exists. Also applies to floating windows.
Fix the issue #3227(https://github.com/i3/i3/issues/3227).
1).Make cmd_scratchpad_show() use the information coming from scratchpad_show().
2).Add a test case 298-scratchpad-show.t.
Was a small typo.
This also has the (positive) side-effect of allowing to move all the
content of a marked workspace next to the target container, see added
tests.
Currently when renaming outputs, an output assignment of "left" will
cause the workspace to move left. Treat this assignment as a proper name
instead (even though it is unlikely an output will be named "left").
Move logic for determining output to move to out of
`workspace_move_to_output`
Add test for ignoring direcionality during rename.
Fixes#3208.
The current behaviour is buggy in the following layout:
T [ A* V [ B C ] ], where the focus stack in V is B > C.
When the user scrolls down, focus correctly moves to B but if the user
scrolls down again the whole vertical container is focused.
This happens because 'bool scroll_next_possible' is false but
con_activate is called on the tabbed container's sibling - the vertical
container.
Explanation for the changed test:
After $third is switched to floating, the test moves focus to $second.
So, the parent of $second (the stacked container) is above $third in the
focus stack and it's children ($first, $second) should get focused
before $second. When $second is switched to floating the correct focus
order for the workspace should be $second->parent (floating con is the
parent) > $first->parent (stacked con) > $third.
Fixes#1975
Seems to be the intention, indicated by this comment (con.c:1307-1309):
/* For split containers, we use the currently focused container within it.
* This allows setting marks on, e.g., tabbed containers which will move
* con to a new tab behind the focused tab. */
Related to #3085.
con_next_focused uses con's parent. But since con can be inside an
unfocused container this means that one of it's siblings could become
focused in the current workspace.
_NET_WM_STATE_FOCUSED is set on _NET_WM_STATE to indicate that the
window is focused. It must be set when the window is newly focused and
removed once the window no longer has focus.
> _NET_WM_STATE_FOCUSED indicates whether the window's decorations are
> drawn in an active state. Clients MUST regard it as a read-only hint.
> It cannot be set at map time or changed via a _NET_WM_STATE client
> message.
For example, this is used by GTK applications to show the decoration in
an active or inactive state. This change can be tested by opening a GTK
application (like evince), focusing the window and unfocusing the
window, and observing a change in the window decorations.
Fixes#2273
With example config:
mode "a_mode" {
bindcode 27 --release mode "default"
}
bindsym $mod+r mode "a_mode"
The first time $mod+r is pressed "a_mode" is activated like normal. When
r (bindcode 27) is pressed to exit the mode:
- On the KeyPress event the corresponding bind->release is correctly
marked as B_UPON_KEYRELEASE_IGNORE_MODS.
- On the KeyRelease event the command 'mode "default"' is executed but
bind->release is still B_UPON_KEYRELEASE_IGNORE_MODS since they are only
reset on KeyPress events.
The second time $mod+r is pressed and "a_mode" is activated and when the
r key is released the 'mode "default"' is executed even though the mods
are not matching since bind->release == B_UPON_KEYRELEASE_IGNORE_MODS.
This still doesn't catch 2 cases:
1. When the order is: press $mod -> press r -> release $mod -> release
r. Since 'r' is released without any modifiers the binding matches.
2. With:
mode "resize" {
bindsym --release r mode "default"
}
bindsym r mode "resize"
This is arguably correct: on the KeyPress event we switch to the mode and
on the KeyRelease we switch back.
Before this commit, get_binding() exited on the first match without
marking the rest --release bindings with B_UPON_KEYRELEASE_IGNORE_MODS.
Similarly, once it found a --release binding during a KeyPress event it
would stop searching for a matching key press binding.
Example config, placing the --release line first will trigger the second
problem:
# i3 config file (v4)
bindsym Super_L exec notify-send "press"
# or
# bindcode 133 exec notify-send "press"
bindsym --release Super_L exec notify-send "release"
# or
# bindcode --release 133 exec notify-send "release"
Fixes#2733
From 548d74015c50d7fae14bfb8bb1989acde5fc22ae:
> 1. press $mod, press x, release x, release $mod
> 2. press $mod, press x, release $mod, release x
case (2.) didn't work, now it should be fixed.
Remove the assumption that only two atoms can possibly be set in
t/253-multiple-net-wm-state-atoms.t so that the tests will pass when
more atoms are supported that may be set during this test.
Fixes:
- Issue where moving an urgent (unfocused) window resets it's urgency
hint.
- Moving an unfocused container to a new parent should not move it to
the top of the focus stack.
The problem here is that con_fullscreen_permits_focusing() does not
check if there is a blocking fullscreen container in the workspace that
the container to be focused belongs. This makes it possible to focus a
container behind a fullscreen window if it's in an unfocused workspace.
This commit introduces a change in the 'focus' command behaviour. When
focusing a container blocked by a fullscreen container, either CF_OUTPUT
or CF_GLOBAL, the blocking container loses its fullscreen mode and the
target container is focused like normal.
This should not affect directional focus commands: left, right, up,
down, parent, child.
Fixes issue #1819.