treat startup command as long-running

Not quite a perfect mirror of xinit, where the startup command execs the
window manager, and the termination of that process brings down the
windowing system, but it might be the Wayland analogue.
This commit is contained in:
Devin J. Pohly 2020-04-11 22:44:34 -05:00
parent 251d15c1fd
commit c82c000bd4

19
dwl.c
View file

@ -8,6 +8,8 @@
#include <stdio.h>
#include <time.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#include <sys/signal.h>
#include <sys/wait.h>
#include <linux/input-event-codes.h>
#include <wayland-server-core.h>
#include <wlr/backend.h>
@ -865,6 +867,7 @@ static void server_new_xdg_surface(struct wl_listener *listener, void *data) {
int main(int argc, char *argv[]) {
wlr_log_init(WLR_DEBUG, NULL);
char *startup_cmd = NULL;
pid_t startup_pid = -1;
int c;
while ((c = getopt(argc, argv, "s:h")) != -1) {
@ -1002,8 +1005,17 @@ int main(int argc, char *argv[]) {
* startup command if requested. */
setenv("WAYLAND_DISPLAY", socket, true);
if (startup_cmd) {
if (fork() == 0) {
startup_pid = fork();
if (startup_pid < 0) {
perror("startup: fork");
wl_display_destroy(server.wl_display);
return 1;
}
if (startup_pid == 0) {
execl("/bin/sh", "/bin/sh", "-c", startup_cmd, (void *)NULL);
perror("startup: execl");
wl_display_destroy(server.wl_display);
return 1;
}
}
/* Run the Wayland event loop. This does not return until you exit the
@ -1014,6 +1026,11 @@ int main(int argc, char *argv[]) {
socket);
wl_display_run(server.wl_display);
if (startup_cmd) {
kill(startup_pid, SIGTERM);
waitpid(startup_pid, NULL, 0);
}
/* Once wl_display_run returns, we shut down the server. */
wl_display_destroy_clients(server.wl_display);
wl_display_destroy(server.wl_display);