This adds support for file path drop events in text/uri-list format.
It is based on work by Pilzschaf in #2040.
Closes#2040
(cherry picked from commit 4cb36872a5)
The Wayland backend was the only one where half the window and input
related code was in the init module. As those bits want to share more
utility code with the window module, the interface between them grows.
To prevent that, this gathers nearly all window and input related code
into the window module.
This is adapted to 3.3-stable from
b7a3af9b79.
The code assumed that all data offers were selections that supported
plaintext UTF-8.
The initial data offer events are now handled almost tolerably. Only
selection data offers are used for clipboard string and only if they
provide plaintext UTF-8. Drag and drop data offers are now rejected as
soon as they enter a surface.
Related to #2040
(cherry picked from commit 8d87be1268)
The string pointer used to write the contents of our clipboard data
offer was never updated, causing it to repeat parts of the beginning of
the string until the correct number of bytes had been written.
(cherry picked from commit 4c110bba41)
If data source creation fails, the string containing the data for it
would be freed a second time during termination.
(cherry picked from commit b386371f57)
Passing any part of the result of glfwGetClipboardString to
glfwSetClipboardString would result in, at best, a use-after-free error.
(cherry picked from commit 9c95cfb9f1)
If the polling was interrupted by a signal or by incomplete or unrelated
data on any file descriptor, handleEvents could return before the full
timeout had elapsed.
This retries the Wayland prepare-to-read and poll until the full timeout
has elapsed or until any event was processed. Unfortunately, due to how
the Wayland client API is designed, this also includes the delete_id
for the frame callback created by eglSwapBuffers.
This means glfwWaitEvents* are still not fully functional on Wayland.
See #1911 for more details.
(cherry picked from commit 71742d9a27)
The display sync requests in glfwPostEmptyEvent could just accumulate as
the display was never flushed on secondary threads.
This adds a proper flush after each sync request.
Fixes#1520Closes#1521
(cherry picked from commit a32cbf6d4f)
Cancel the prepared-to-read state on the calling thread before starting
to call back to user code.
Emitting close requests here is not a good choice but that is for
a future commit to address.
(cherry picked from commit 203a7c59d2)
By definition a hidden window on Wayland does not have valid framebuffer
contents.
This adds a window damage (refresh) event when a window is shown, to
request an initial frame for the now visible window.
(cherry picked from commit 25c521cbe5)
A window created with GLFW_VISIBLE set was not made visible by the
initial buffer swap during context attribute refresh.
Regression introduced by @elmindreda in
094aa6d3c7.
(cherry picked from commit c05acf6246)
Platform code should not generate key events with GLFW_REPEAT.
GLFW_PRESS is translated into GLFW_REPEAT by shared code based on the
key state cache.
This confused the automatic key release logic into not generating an
event with GLFW_RELEASE for a key being repeated when the window lost
input focus.
(cherry picked from commit 3f5dfeaf29)
Corrects the protocol violation when creating an xdg_surface from a
wl_surface that already has a buffer due to EGL buffer swaps.
This commit is based on PR #1731 by @ghost, but adapted and altered:
- The XDG surface and role are now only created when a window is shown
to prevent application lists from showing command-line applications
with off-screen-only windows
- The special case of Wayland+EGL buffer swap is now in the EGL code
to mirror how X11 is handled
- Adaption to run-time platform selection and separate credits file
Fixes#1492Closes#1731
(cherry picked from commit 094aa6d3c7)
In the case the key repeat timerfd was interrupted before read(), the
cursor timerfd wasn’t read at all even when it could.
Related to #1711
(cherry picked from commit 68879081cb)
The Wayland protocol spec[1] states that set_cursor must be called
with the serial number of the enter event. However, GLFW is passing in
the serial number of the latest received event, which does not meet the
protocol spec.
[1] https://wayland.freedesktop.org/docs/html/apa.html#protocol-spec-wl_pointer
As a result, set_cursor calls were simply ignored by the compositor.
This fix complies with the protocol more closely by specifically caching
the enter event serial, and using it for all set_cursor calls.
Fixes#1706Closes#1899
(cherry picked from commit e7758c506d)
On Wayland we implement Client-Side Decorations if the compositors do not
implement SSDs. In that case, the destructors of the surfaces were called
in the wrong order, leading to a dereference of an already freed object.
We need to first destroy the subsurface before destroying the parent surface.
Related PR on kitty: https://github.com/kovidgoyal/kitty/pull/3066
Related issue on kitty: https://github.com/kovidgoyal/kitty/issues/3051Closes#1798.
(cherry picked from commit 0dc1005c85)