Basically, this is the same fix as commit 914ca6cf :-/. Once again, we
called exit() instead of _exit(), but this time it lead to a kill(0,
SIGTERM), effectively killing all processes in the i3 process group,
including i3 itself. The cause for the kill(0) is that nagbar_pid is set
to 0 by fork(), signaling we’re in the child process. The cleanup
handler only checks for nagbar_pid being -1 as a special value, however.
Previously, in case 'layout stacked' (for example) had been called
interactively, con_set_layout would be called with focused->parent,
while with for_window, it’d be called on the actual matching container.
This difference in behavior was the cause for the inability to use
'for_window [class="XTerm"] layout tabbed', which now works \o/, but
more on that below.
The change also allows us to handle the case of the user selecting a
CT_WORKSPACE container properly, that is, by using the special case and
creating a new split container on the workspace which gets all the
contents, but a new layout.
Now, before you are enthusiastic about the change and try to use
for_window magic in your config file, keep in mind: The 'layout' command
acts on the parent split container. That is, when using a line such as
this one:
for_window [class="XTerm"] layout tabbed
…and opening an XTerm when on a workspace with one single other window,
the whole workspace will be set tabbed (just as previously when you
opened an XTerm and sent 'layout tabbed' manually).
Therefore, to open XTerm in its own tabbed split container, you need to
split before:
for_window [class="XTerm"] split v, layout tabbed
The comma here is important! It says that the second command should not
be treated as an entirely unrelated command, but it should also relate
the matching window (while it does work with a ';', that is prone to
race-conditions and should be avoided).
fixes#358
When you have a tabbed container which has had more than one container
but currently has precisely one container, there was a bit of flickering
when switching workspaces occasionally. This commit fixes it by properly
setting the height of the deco_rect (and thus the X11 window) to not
make the old window contents show up for a minimum period of time.
fixes#777
This fixes a compatibility issue with gnome-terminal and xfce’s
terminal, where fullscreening would lead to moving the window and not
displaying the contents properly.
fixes#788
Harald mentioned he was surprised about the locales we recommend in the
.xsession example, so I’ve re-investigated.
Here is the test program I have used:
#include <stdio.h>
#include <locale.h>
int main() {
/* SUSv2 setlocale(3) says:
* Internationalised programs must call setlocale() to initiate
* a specific language operation. This can be done by calling
* setlocale() as follows: */
setlocale(LC_ALL, "");
printf("LC_NUMERIC is %s\n", setlocale(LC_NUMERIC, NULL));
}
Then, I have unset LANG and LC_*:
midna /tmp $ env | grep LANG
midna /tmp $ env | grep LC
midna /tmp $
Now, observe that LC_ALL overwrites all specific LC variables:
midna /tmp $ LC_ALL=de_DE.UTF-8 LC_NUMERIC=en_DK.UTF-8 ./localetest
LC_NUMERIC is de_DE.UTF-8
However, LANG does not:
midna /tmp $ LANG=de_DE.UTF-8 ./localetest
LC_NUMERIC is de_DE.UTF-8
midna /tmp $ LANG=de_DE.UTF-8 LC_NUMERIC=en_DK.UTF-8 ./localetest
LC_NUMERIC is en_DK.UTF-8
This is consistent with what perldoc perllocale says:
http://perldoc.perl.org/perllocale.html#ENVIRONMENT
When resizing floating windows, changing the height was not correctly
handled. This commit fixes that and adds testcases for shrinking and
growing the width and height of floating windows.
To automagically do the right thing when rotating monitors with regards
to splith/splitv layout (depending on width/height of the monitor), we
change the orientation of existing workspaces and the first child.
If that first child happens to be a stacked/tabbed con, we cannot change
the layout unconditionally (previously, the orientation was not in the
layout, so we never noticed this problem).
fixes#768
The latter is actually wrong. For example, when running i3
--moreversion, it will print $(pwd)/i3 instead of $(which i3). In my
previous tests, this coincidentally was the same.
While this is a bit ugly, it makes the log messages end up where they
are supposed to: in the shmlog/stdout in case of i3 and on stdout in
case of utilities such as i3-input