Use pango to parse font configuration early, and reject the command as
invalid if the value is invalid for pango. Since we're already parsing
the font into a `PangoFontDescription`, keep that instance around and
avoid re-parsing the font each time we render text.
Fixes: https://github.com/swaywm/sway/issues/6805
Prior to 62d90a8e, titlebar's font height (and other related values)
would change any time any titlebar's content changed, so these values
were recalculated each time any titlebar's content changed (or a new
titlebar was created).
However, since the above was merge, these values no longer change so
often and we only need to recalculate them when the configured font
changes (and stop calling `config_update_font_height` each time
titlebars are rendered).
This commit removes all the unecessary calls to this function and avoids
all those unecessary calculations. Whenever the font strays from the
default value, the `font` command is called, and it calls
`config_update_font_height`, which is enough to keep the value always up
to date.
I've also added a default value to the `font_baseline` config, since
otherwise that's zero for setups that don't explicitly specify a font.
Use fixed titlebar heights. The default height is calculated based on
font metrics for the configured font and current locale.
Some testing with titles with emoji and CJK characters (which are
substantially higher in my setup) shows that the titlebars retain their
initial value, text does shift up or down, and all titlebars always
remain aligned.
Also drop some also now-unecessary title_height calculations.
Makes also needed to be updated, since they should be positioned with
the same rules.
get_current_time_msec is only used in cursor.c, so we can move it in and
make it static. This is primarily intended to avoid a symbol collision
with wlroots, which we unfortunately do not have a good solution for
yet.
When colors aren't used, write the log importance to stderr. This makes
it easier to grep for errors and avoids mistaking error messages for
debug messages.
This is [1] ported to Sway.
[1]: https://github.com/swaywm/wlroots/pull/2149
Prevents build failures when calling the function with 'const char *'
arguments.
This is also more accurate since the function is not expected to modify
the args.
The pointer `data` is cast to a more strictly aligned pointer type. To
prevent issues, the `data32` buffer is removed and its occurrences are
replaced with an offset from the `data` buffer.
This commit makes `get_current_time_msec` correctly return milliseconds
as opposed to microseconds. It also considers the value of `tv_sec`, so
we don't lose occasionally go back in time by one second. Finally, the
function is moved into `util.c` so that it can be reused elsewhere
without having to consider these pitfalls.
../common/log.c:63:16: error: use of undeclared identifier 'CLOCK_MONOTONIC'
clock_gettime(CLOCK_MONOTONIC, &start_time);
^
../common/log.c:75:16: error: use of undeclared identifier 'CLOCK_MONOTONIC'
clock_gettime(CLOCK_MONOTONIC, &ts);
^
This is the second in a series of commits to refactor the color handling
in sway. This removes the duplicated color parsing code in
sway/commands/client.c. Additionally, this combines the parsing of
colors to float arrays with that in sway/config.c and introduces a
color_to_rgba function in commom/util.c.
As an added bonus, this also makes it so non of the colors in a border
color class will be changed unless all of the colors specified are
valid. This ensures that an invalid command does not get partially
applied.
This is the first in a series of commits to refactor the color handling
in sway. This changes parse_color to return whether it was success and
no longer uses 0xFFFFFFFF as the fallback color. This also verifies that
the string actually contains a valid hexadecimal number along with
the length checks.
In the process of altering the calls to parse_color, I also took the
opportunity to heavily refactor swaybar's ipc_parse_colors function.
This allowed for several lines of duplicated code to be removed.
set_cloexec is defined by both sway and wlroots (and who-knows-else),
so rename the sway one for supporting static linkage. We also remove
the duplicate version of this in client/.
Fixes: https://github.com/swaywm/sway/issues/4677
Because meson does not provide a simple way to get the relative build
path, it is computed with a pair of foreach loops. As meson does not
have a simple way to compute string length (except via underscorify
and 63 split operations), the build script uses a shell command
instead.
If the compiler does not suppot -fmacro-prefix-map, then fall back
to passing in the relative path prefix, and use its length to offset
the uses of __FILE__ in log messages so that the build path is at
least still not included in the logs. This is significantly more
efficient than calling _sway_strip_path.
This patch fixes faulty command parsing introduced by
f0f5de9a9e87ca1f0d74e7cbf82ffceba51ffbe6. When that commit allowed
criteria reset on ';' delimeters in commands lists, it failed to account
for its inner ','-parsing loop eating threw the entire rest of the
string.
This patch refactors argsep to use a list of multiple separators, and
(optionally) return the separator that it matched against in this
iteration via a pointer. This allows it to hint at the command parser
which separator was used at the end of the last command, allowing it to
trigger a potential secondary read of the criteria.
Fixes #4239
This just removes the ipc recv timeout log statement in
`ipc_recv_set_timeout`. The `tv_sec` field of `struct timeval` has
varying types and/or sizes depending on the platform and architecture.
On some of these, the current format string will cause compilation
errors. Additionally, the log statement is not extremely useful and the
function is currently only used by swaymsg, which has a hardcoded log
level that will prevent it from even being shown, so there is no point
in even keeping it.
The new upstream is https://github.com/swaywm/swaybg
This commit also refactors our use of gdk-pixbuf a bit, since the only
remaining reverse dependency is swaybar tray support.
This adds a 3 second timeout to the initial reply in swaymsg. This
prevents swaymsg from hanging when `swaymsg -t get_{inputs,seats}` is
used in i3. The timeout is removed when waiting for a subscribed event
or monitoring for subscribed events.
This also adds type checks to commands where i3 does not reply with all
of the properties that sway does (such as `modes` in `get_outputs`).
This is mostly just a behavioral adjustment since swaymsg should run on
i3. When running under i3, some command reply's (such as the one for
`get_outputs) may have more useful information in the raw json than the
pretty printed version.
Many laptop screens report unknown subpixel order. Allow users to manually set subpixel hinting to work around this.
Addresses https://github.com/swaywm/sway/issues/3163
If output_cmd_background is given a valid mode as the first argument,
then there is no file given and an error should be returned.
join_args should not be called with an argc of zero since it sets the
last character to the null terminator. With an argc of zero, the length
is zero causing a heap buffer overflow when setting the byte before the
start of argv to '\0'. This probably will not ever generate a segfault,
but may cause data corruption to whatever is directly before it in
memory. To make other such cases easier to detect, this also adds a
sway_assert in join_args when argc is zero.
Modifier handling functions were moved into sway/input/keyboard.c;
opposite_direction for enum wlr_direction into sway/tree/output.c;
and get_parent_pid into sway/tree/root.c .
This commit mostly duplicates the wlr_log functions, although
with a sway_* prefix. (This is very similar to PR #2009.)
However, the logging function no longer needs to be replaceable,
so sway_log_init's second argument is used to set the exit
callback for sway_abort.
wlr_log_init is still invoked in sway/main.c
This commit makes it easier to remove the wlroots dependency for
the helper programs swaymsg, swaybg, swaybar, and swaynag.
Previously, the success of `getline` was tested by checking if the
buffer it allocates is nonempty and has a nonzero first byte. As
`getline` does not explicitly zero out its memory buffer, this may
fail (e.g., with AddressSanitizer). Instead, we check that at least one
character was returned on standard output.
Also, trailing newlines (if present) are now removed.