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 was introduced in 252db3b8c (#3245). That commit moved the
con_activate line inside the loop, meaning it wouldn't always be called.
When the mouse moved after a rename with focus_follows_mouse enabled,
check_crossing_screen_boundary (src/handlers.c:111) called
con_descend_focused that used the wrong focus order.
I also change con_activate to con_focus since we don't really want to
raise floating containers there.
Fixes#3325
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.
This also replaces code in create_workspace_on_output() that is
theoretically more efficient but:
1. It isn't a huge difference since it depends on the number of outputs,
that shouldn't be high.
2. get_assigned_output will be modified and used for #555, then its
logic should be followed in create_workspace_on_output() too.
Another note for create_workspace_on_output: if assigned is not NULL the
condition (assigned != output->con) should never be false, ie if there
is an assigned output to this name, it isn't the current one. This
happens because the current callers check for assignments before calling
create_workspace_on_output().
https://www.x.org/releases/current/doc/kbproto/xkbproto.html#Detectable_Autorepeat
Detectable autorepeat should only affect --release bindings. Currently,
when a user keeps a key pressed, we get multiple KeyPress and KeyRelease
events. With this change, we still get multiple KeyPress events, which
means that you can still keep a key pressed to repeatedly execute a
normal binding, but only one KeyRelease event when the key is physically
released.
Unfortunately, this change is not currently testable because detectable
autorepeat doesn't seem to work under Xephyr. AwesomeWM experienced the
same problem:
6f2424e901Fixes#3306
The current text is confusing. '--no-auto-back-and-forth' doesn't
disable the 'workspace back_and_forth' command, the flag is not even
valid for that command.
X will not allow a window with ParentRelative background to be created
or reparented under a window with mismatching color depth.
Deal with this by destroying the container frame and creating a new one
with the right depth upon swallowing.
Defer destruction of the frame window until after the updated tree has
been rendered to avoid some distracting flickering.
Fixes#3297
This fixes a new warning from GCC 8.1, -Wstringop-truncation:
https://gcc.gnu.org/gcc-8/changes.htmlhttps://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc-8.1.0/gcc/Warning-Options.html#index-Wstringop-truncation
Replacing with memcpy is what gcc suggests:
> As another example, the following call to strncpy results in copying
> to d just the characters preceding the terminating NUL, without
> appending the NUL to the end. Assuming the result of strncpy is
> necessarily a NUL-terminated string is a common mistake, and so the
> call is diagnosed. To avoid the warning when the result is not
> expected to be NUL-terminated, call memcpy instead.
> void copy (char *d, const char *s)
> {
> strncpy (d, s, strlen (s));
> }
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.