adopt a bit more dwm-like terseness

This commit is contained in:
Devin J. Pohly 2020-04-23 21:16:01 -05:00
parent 66bf55930f
commit a5a7445dee

135
dwl.c
View file

@ -171,9 +171,9 @@ static Client *xytoclient(double x, double y,
static Monitor *xytomon(double x, double y);
/* variables */
static struct wl_display *wl_display;
static struct wl_display *dpy;
static struct wlr_backend *backend;
static struct wlr_renderer *renderer;
static struct wlr_renderer *drw;
static struct wlr_xdg_shell *xdg_shell;
static struct wl_listener new_xdg_surface;
@ -258,8 +258,8 @@ buttonpress(struct wl_listener *listener, void *data)
void
createkeyboard(struct wlr_input_device *device)
{
Keyboard *keyboard = calloc(1, sizeof(*keyboard));
keyboard->device = device;
Keyboard *kb = calloc(1, sizeof(*kb));
kb->device = device;
/* Prepare an XKB keymap and assign it to the keyboard. */
struct xkb_context *context = xkb_context_new(XKB_CONTEXT_NO_FLAGS);
@ -272,15 +272,15 @@ createkeyboard(struct wlr_input_device *device)
wlr_keyboard_set_repeat_info(device->keyboard, 25, 600);
/* Here we set up listeners for keyboard events. */
keyboard->modifiers.notify = keypressmod;
wl_signal_add(&device->keyboard->events.modifiers, &keyboard->modifiers);
keyboard->key.notify = keypress;
wl_signal_add(&device->keyboard->events.key, &keyboard->key);
kb->modifiers.notify = keypressmod;
wl_signal_add(&device->keyboard->events.modifiers, &kb->modifiers);
kb->key.notify = keypress;
wl_signal_add(&device->keyboard->events.key, &kb->key);
wlr_seat_set_keyboard(seat, device);
/* And add the keyboard to our list of keyboards */
wl_list_insert(&keyboards, &keyboard->link);
wl_list_insert(&keyboards, &kb->link);
}
void
@ -299,17 +299,16 @@ createmon(struct wl_listener *listener, void *data)
struct wlr_output_mode *mode = wlr_output_preferred_mode(wlr_output);
wlr_output_set_mode(wlr_output, mode);
wlr_output_enable(wlr_output, true);
if (!wlr_output_commit(wlr_output)) {
if (!wlr_output_commit(wlr_output))
return;
}
}
/* Allocates and configures monitor state using configured rules */
Monitor *m = calloc(1, sizeof(*m));
m->wlr_output = wlr_output;
m->tagset[0] = m->tagset[1] = 1;
int i;
for (i = 0; i < LENGTH(monrules); i++) {
for (i = 0; i < LENGTH(monrules); i++)
if (!monrules[i].name ||
!strcmp(wlr_output->name, monrules[i].name)) {
m->mfact = monrules[i].mfact;
@ -319,7 +318,6 @@ createmon(struct wl_listener *listener, void *data)
m->lt[0] = m->lt[1] = monrules[i].lt;
break;
}
}
/* Sets up a listener for the frame notify event. */
m->frame.notify = rendermon;
wl_signal_add(&wlr_output->events.frame, &m->frame);
@ -343,9 +341,8 @@ createnotify(struct wl_listener *listener, void *data)
/* This event is raised when wlr_xdg_shell receives a new xdg surface from a
* client, either a toplevel (application window) or popup. */
struct wlr_xdg_surface *xdg_surface = data;
if (xdg_surface->role != WLR_XDG_SURFACE_ROLE_TOPLEVEL) {
if (xdg_surface->role != WLR_XDG_SURFACE_ROLE_TOPLEVEL)
return;
}
/* Allocate a Client for this surface */
Client *c = calloc(1, sizeof(*c));
@ -423,10 +420,9 @@ focus(Client *c, struct wlr_surface *surface)
/* XXX Need to understand xdg toplevel/popups to know if there's more
* simplification that can be done in this function */
struct wlr_surface *prev_surface = seat->keyboard_state.focused_surface;
if (prev_surface == surface) {
/* Don't re-focus an already focused surface. */
if (prev_surface == surface)
return;
}
if (prev_surface) {
/*
* Deactivate the previously focused surface. This lets the
@ -523,9 +519,8 @@ inputdevice(struct wl_listener *listener, void *data)
* communiciated to the client. In dwl we always have a cursor, even if
* there are no pointer devices, so we always include that capability. */
uint32_t caps = WL_SEAT_CAPABILITY_POINTER;
if (!wl_list_empty(&keyboards)) {
if (!wl_list_empty(&keyboards))
caps |= WL_SEAT_CAPABILITY_KEYBOARD;
}
wlr_seat_set_capabilities(seat, caps);
}
@ -538,14 +533,13 @@ keybinding(uint32_t mods, xkb_keysym_t sym)
* processing.
*/
bool handled = false;
for (int i = 0; i < LENGTH(keys); i++) {
for (int i = 0; i < LENGTH(keys); i++)
if (sym == keys[i].keysym &&
CLEANMASK(mods) == CLEANMASK(keys[i].mod) &&
keys[i].func) {
keys[i].func(&keys[i].arg);
handled = true;
}
}
return handled;
}
@ -553,8 +547,7 @@ void
keypress(struct wl_listener *listener, void *data)
{
/* This event is raised when a key is pressed or released. */
Keyboard *keyboard =
wl_container_of(listener, keyboard, key);
Keyboard *kb = wl_container_of(listener, kb, key);
struct wlr_event_keyboard_key *event = data;
/* Translate libinput keycode -> xkbcommon */
@ -562,20 +555,18 @@ keypress(struct wl_listener *listener, void *data)
/* Get a list of keysyms based on the keymap for this keyboard */
const xkb_keysym_t *syms;
int nsyms = xkb_state_key_get_syms(
keyboard->device->keyboard->xkb_state, keycode, &syms);
kb->device->keyboard->xkb_state, keycode, &syms);
bool handled = false;
uint32_t mods = wlr_keyboard_get_modifiers(keyboard->device->keyboard);
if (event->state == WLR_KEY_PRESSED) {
uint32_t mods = wlr_keyboard_get_modifiers(kb->device->keyboard);
/* On _press_, attempt to process a compositor keybinding. */
for (int i = 0; i < nsyms; i++) {
if (event->state == WLR_KEY_PRESSED)
for (int i = 0; i < nsyms; i++)
handled = keybinding(mods, syms[i]) || handled;
}
}
if (!handled) {
/* Otherwise, we pass it along to the client. */
wlr_seat_set_keyboard(seat, keyboard->device);
wlr_seat_set_keyboard(seat, kb->device);
wlr_seat_keyboard_notify_key(seat, event->time_msec,
event->keycode, event->state);
}
@ -586,17 +577,17 @@ keypressmod(struct wl_listener *listener, void *data)
{
/* This event is raised when a modifier key, such as shift or alt, is
* pressed. We simply communicate this to the client. */
Keyboard *keyboard = wl_container_of(listener, keyboard, modifiers);
Keyboard *kb = wl_container_of(listener, kb, modifiers);
/*
* A seat can only have one keyboard, but this is a limitation of the
* Wayland protocol - not wlroots. We assign all connected keyboards to the
* same seat. You can swap out the underlying wlr_keyboard like this and
* wlr_seat handles this transparently.
*/
wlr_seat_set_keyboard(seat, keyboard->device);
wlr_seat_set_keyboard(seat, kb->device);
/* Send modifiers to the client. */
wlr_seat_keyboard_notify_modifiers(seat,
&keyboard->device->keyboard->modifiers);
&kb->device->keyboard->modifiers);
}
void
@ -655,13 +646,12 @@ motionnotify(uint32_t time)
double sx, sy;
struct wlr_surface *surface = NULL;
Client *c = xytoclient(cursor->x, cursor->y, &surface, &sx, &sy);
if (!c) {
/* If there's no client under the cursor, set the cursor image to a
* default. This is what makes the cursor image appear when you move it
* around the screen, not over any clients. */
if (!c)
wlr_xcursor_manager_set_cursor_image(
cursor_mgr, "left_ptr", cursor);
}
if (!surface) {
/* Clear pointer focus so future button events and such are not sent to
* the last client to have the cursor over it. */
@ -712,11 +702,9 @@ movemouse(const Arg *arg)
{
double sx, sy;
struct wlr_surface *surface;
Client *c = xytoclient(cursor->x, cursor->y,
&surface, &sx, &sy);
if (!c) {
Client *c = xytoclient(cursor->x, cursor->y, &surface, &sx, &sy);
if (!c)
return;
}
/* Prepare for moving client in motionnotify */
grabc = c;
@ -731,7 +719,7 @@ movemouse(const Arg *arg)
void
quit(const Arg *arg)
{
wl_display_terminate(wl_display);
wl_display_terminate(dpy);
}
void
@ -760,9 +748,8 @@ render(struct wlr_surface *surface, int sx, int sy, void *data)
* could have sent a pixel buffer which we copied to the GPU, or a few other
* means. You don't have to worry about this, wlroots takes care of it. */
struct wlr_texture *texture = wlr_surface_get_texture(surface);
if (texture == NULL) {
if (!texture)
return;
}
/* The client has a position in layout coordinates. If you have two displays,
* one next to the other, both 1080p, a client on the rightmost display might
@ -801,7 +788,7 @@ render(struct wlr_surface *surface, int sx, int sy, void *data)
/* This takes our matrix, the texture, and an alpha, and performs the actual
* rendering on the GPU. */
wlr_render_texture_with_matrix(renderer, texture, matrix, 1);
wlr_render_texture_with_matrix(drw, texture, matrix, 1);
/* This lets the client know that we've displayed that frame and it can
* prepare another one now if it likes. */
@ -819,9 +806,8 @@ rendermon(struct wl_listener *listener, void *data)
clock_gettime(CLOCK_MONOTONIC, &now);
/* wlr_output_attach_render makes the OpenGL context current. */
if (!wlr_output_attach_render(m->wlr_output, NULL)) {
if (!wlr_output_attach_render(m->wlr_output, NULL))
return;
}
/* Get effective monitor geometry and window area */
m->geom = wlr_output_layout_get_box(output_layout, m->wlr_output);
m->wx = m->geom->x;
@ -832,8 +818,8 @@ rendermon(struct wl_listener *listener, void *data)
arrange(m);
/* Begin the renderer (calls glViewport and some other GL sanity checks) */
wlr_renderer_begin(renderer, m->wlr_output->width, m->wlr_output->height);
wlr_renderer_clear(renderer, rootcolor);
wlr_renderer_begin(drw, m->wlr_output->width, m->wlr_output->height);
wlr_renderer_clear(drw, rootcolor);
/* Each subsequent window we render is rendered on top of the last. Because
* our client list is ordered front-to-back, we iterate over it backwards. */
@ -866,7 +852,7 @@ rendermon(struct wl_listener *listener, void *data)
/* Conclude rendering and swap the buffers, showing the final frame
* on-screen. */
wlr_renderer_end(renderer);
wlr_renderer_end(drw);
wlr_output_commit(m->wlr_output);
}
@ -883,11 +869,10 @@ resizemouse(const Arg *arg)
{
double sx, sy;
struct wlr_surface *surface;
Client *c = xytoclient(cursor->x, cursor->y,
&surface, &sx, &sy);
if (!c) {
Client *c = xytoclient(cursor->x, cursor->y, &surface, &sx, &sy);
if (!c)
return;
}
struct wlr_box sbox;
wlr_xdg_surface_get_geometry(c->xdg_surface, &sbox);
/* Doesn't work for X11 output - the next absolute motion event
@ -910,7 +895,7 @@ run(char *startup_cmd)
pid_t startup_pid = -1;
/* Add a Unix socket to the Wayland display. */
const char *socket = wl_display_add_socket_auto(wl_display);
const char *socket = wl_display_add_socket_auto(dpy);
if (!socket) {
wlr_backend_destroy(backend);
exit(1);
@ -920,7 +905,7 @@ run(char *startup_cmd)
* master, etc */
if (!wlr_backend_start(backend)) {
wlr_backend_destroy(backend);
wl_display_destroy(wl_display);
wl_display_destroy(dpy);
exit(1);
}
@ -940,13 +925,13 @@ run(char *startup_cmd)
startup_pid = fork();
if (startup_pid < 0) {
perror("startup: fork");
wl_display_destroy(wl_display);
wl_display_destroy(dpy);
exit(1);
}
if (startup_pid == 0) {
execl("/bin/sh", "/bin/sh", "-c", startup_cmd, (void *)NULL);
perror("startup: execl");
wl_display_destroy(wl_display);
wl_display_destroy(dpy);
exit(1);
}
}
@ -956,7 +941,7 @@ run(char *startup_cmd)
* frame events at the refresh rate, and so on. */
wlr_log(WLR_INFO, "Running Wayland compositor on WAYLAND_DISPLAY=%s",
socket);
wl_display_run(wl_display);
wl_display_run(dpy);
if (startup_cmd) {
kill(startup_pid, SIGTERM);
@ -990,19 +975,15 @@ setcursor(struct wl_listener *listener, void *data)
{
/* This event is raised by the seat when a client provides a cursor image */
struct wlr_seat_pointer_request_set_cursor_event *event = data;
struct wlr_seat_client *focused_client =
seat->pointer_state.focused_client;
/* This can be sent by any client, so we check to make sure this one is
* actually has pointer focus first. */
if (focused_client == event->seat_client) {
/* Once we've vetted the client, we can tell the cursor to use the
* provided surface as the cursor image. It will set the hardware cursor
* on the output that it's currently on and continue to do so as the
* cursor moves between outputs. */
* actually has pointer focus first. If so, we can tell the cursor to
* use the provided surface as the cursor image. It will set the
* hardware cursor on the output that it's currently on and continue to
* do so as the cursor moves between outputs. */
if (event->seat_client == seat->pointer_state.focused_client)
wlr_cursor_set_surface(cursor, event->surface,
event->hotspot_x, event->hotspot_y);
}
}
void
setlayout(const Arg *arg)
@ -1039,20 +1020,20 @@ setup(void)
* backend uses the renderer, for example, to fall back to software cursors
* if the backend does not support hardware cursors (some older GPUs
* don't). */
backend = wlr_backend_autocreate(wl_display, NULL);
backend = wlr_backend_autocreate(dpy, NULL);
/* If we don't provide a renderer, autocreate makes a GLES2 renderer for us.
* The renderer is responsible for defining the various pixel formats it
* supports for shared memory, this configures that for clients. */
renderer = wlr_backend_get_renderer(backend);
wlr_renderer_init_wl_display(renderer, wl_display);
drw = wlr_backend_get_renderer(backend);
wlr_renderer_init_wl_display(drw, dpy);
/* This creates some hands-off wlroots interfaces. The compositor is
* necessary for clients to allocate surfaces and the data device manager
* handles the clipboard. Each of these wlroots interfaces has room for you
* to dig your fingers in and play with their behavior if you want. */
wlr_compositor_create(wl_display, renderer);
wlr_data_device_manager_create(wl_display);
wlr_compositor_create(dpy, drw);
wlr_data_device_manager_create(dpy);
/* Creates an output layout, which a wlroots utility for working with an
* arrangement of screens in a physical layout. */
@ -1072,7 +1053,7 @@ setup(void)
*/
wl_list_init(&clients);
wl_list_init(&fstack);
xdg_shell = wlr_xdg_shell_create(wl_display);
xdg_shell = wlr_xdg_shell_create(dpy);
new_xdg_surface.notify = createnotify;
wl_signal_add(&xdg_shell->events.new_surface,
&new_xdg_surface);
@ -1123,7 +1104,7 @@ setup(void)
wl_list_init(&keyboards);
new_input.notify = inputdevice;
wl_signal_add(&backend->events.new_input, &new_input);
seat = wlr_seat_create(wl_display, "seat0");
seat = wlr_seat_create(dpy, "seat0");
request_cursor.notify = setcursor;
wl_signal_add(&seat->events.request_set_cursor,
&request_cursor);
@ -1279,7 +1260,7 @@ xytoclient(double x, double y,
_surface = wlr_xdg_surface_surface_at(c->xdg_surface,
x - c->x, y - c->y, &_sx, &_sy);
if (_surface != NULL) {
if (_surface) {
*sx = _sx;
*sy = _sy;
*surface = _surface;
@ -1324,13 +1305,13 @@ main(int argc, char *argv[])
/* The Wayland display is managed by libwayland. It handles accepting
* clients from the Unix socket, manging Wayland globals, and so on. */
wl_display = wl_display_create();
dpy = wl_display_create();
setup();
run(startup_cmd);
/* Once wl_display_run returns, we shut down the server. */
wl_display_destroy_clients(wl_display);
wl_display_destroy(wl_display);
wl_display_destroy_clients(dpy);
wl_display_destroy(dpy);
return 0;
}