From 68f9ee7e0b3fdddfa42fa11a15d9ae84460d5e19 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Rostislav Pehlivanov Date: Sun, 1 Oct 2017 21:16:49 +0100 Subject: wayland_common: rewrite from scratch The wayland code was written more than 4 years ago when wayland wasn't even at version 1.0. This commit rewrites everything in a more modern way, switches to using the new xdg v6 shell interface which solves a lot of bugs and makes mpv tiling-friedly, adds support for drag and drop, adds support for touchscreens, adds support for KDE's server decorations protocol, and finally adds support for the new idle-inhibitor protocol. It does not yet use the frame callback as a main rendering loop driver, this will happen with a later commit. --- video/out/wayland/server-decoration.xml | 94 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 94 insertions(+) create mode 100644 video/out/wayland/server-decoration.xml (limited to 'video/out/wayland/server-decoration.xml') diff --git a/video/out/wayland/server-decoration.xml b/video/out/wayland/server-decoration.xml new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..8bc106c7c4 --- /dev/null +++ b/video/out/wayland/server-decoration.xml @@ -0,0 +1,94 @@ + + + . + ]]> + + + This interface allows to coordinate whether the server should create + a server-side window decoration around a wl_surface representing a + shell surface (wl_shell_surface or similar). By announcing support + for this interface the server indicates that it supports server + side decorations. + + + + When a client creates a server-side decoration object it indicates + that it supports the protocol. The client is supposed to tell the + server whether it wants server-side decorations or will provide + client-side decorations. + + If the client does not create a server-side decoration object for + a surface the server interprets this as lack of support for this + protocol and considers it as client-side decorated. Nevertheless a + client-side decorated surface should use this protocol to indicate + to the server that it does not want a server-side deco. + + + + + + + + + + + + + This event is emitted directly after binding the interface. It contains + the default mode for the decoration. When a new server decoration object + is created this new object will be in the default mode until the first + request_mode is requested. + + The server may change the default mode at any time. + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + This event is emitted directly after the decoration is created and + represents the base decoration policy by the server. E.g. a server + which wants all surfaces to be client-side decorated will send Client, + a server which wants server-side decoration will send Server. + + The client can request a different mode through the decoration request. + The server will acknowledge this by another event with the same mode. So + even if a server prefers server-side decoration it's possible to force a + client-side decoration. + + The server may emit this event at any time. In this case the client can + again request a different mode. It's the responsibility of the server to + prevent a feedback loop. + + + + + -- cgit v1.2.3