8809313be17227cb735fe67cc59d08dde5ea9df0
4 Commits
| Author | SHA1 | Message | Date | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 4a80165428 |
event_loop, a11y, text_shaping: AccessKit AT-SPI2 bridge, cross-app clipboard, xdg-activation, HarfBuzz shaping, multi-touch hooks
Five orthogonal capabilities land together because they share the same `try_run` plumbing: an optional global is bound at startup, a piece of state is added to `AppData`, the run-loop iteration drains an inbox / pushes a frame snapshot, and the public surface gains a small set of opt-in `App` hooks. Nothing here breaks an existing app — every new path degrades to a no-op when the compositor does not advertise the relevant global or when the platform adapter cannot start. AT-SPI2 accessibility via AccessKit. A new `src/a11y/` module owns the platform adapter and the inbound `ActionRequest` channel. `A11yState::try_new` constructs an `accesskit_unix::Adapter`; when the AT-SPI2 daemon is not on the session bus (headless CI, locked-down compositors) the constructor returns `None` and the rest of the pipeline runs unchanged. After every successful `draw_frame`, the run loop builds a fresh `accesskit::TreeUpdate` from `widget_rects` and pushes it through the adapter — main surface plus every visible overlay, each translated to global coordinates via `surface_offset_for` so screen readers report positions in the same frame the user sees. Buttons / toggles / checkboxes / radios / list items / sliders / text edits map to the matching `Role`s; `Click` and `Focus` actions are advertised on every interactive node; inbound action requests are drained at the top of each iteration and translated into a synthetic press / focus on the matching widget. The integration is documented as best-effort in `docs/architecture.md` under "Known gaps and non-goals": hierarchical nesting, per-widget accessible names, live regions and `Action::SetValue` are listed as the natural follow-ups that the foundation now supports but does not yet wire. Cross-application clipboard via `wl_data_device_manager`. A new `src/event_loop/data_device.rs` bridges the existing process-local `clipboard: String` to the Wayland selection. Outbound (Ctrl+C / Cut): after the local clipboard is populated, `publish_clipboard_selection` creates a `CopyPasteSource` offering `text/plain;charset=utf-8` and installs it as the seat's selection; `DataSourceHandler::send` writes the cached string into the fd the peer hands us. Inbound (Ctrl+V from another app): `DataDeviceHandler::selection` asks for the offered text via `WlDataOffer::receive`, spawns a tiny worker thread to drain the read pipe with a 16 MiB cap to prevent paste-bomb DoS, and posts the result back through an `mpsc::Sender` that the run loop drains each iteration into `data.clipboard`. The `clipboard:` field's doc-comment is updated to reflect the new behaviour: process-local when the compositor does not advertise the global, synchronised with the seat selection otherwise. External drag-and-drop reception. The same `data_device` module handles `DragOffer` enter / motion / leave / drop_performed: `on_drop_motion( x, y )` fires while the drag hovers over the surface, `on_drop_leave()` when it withdraws without dropping, and `on_drop_received( x, y, mime, text )` when an external payload (`text/uri-list`, `text/plain`, …) is released on top of an ltk window. The receive path reuses the same worker-thread / channel pattern as the clipboard so the run loop never blocks on the read fd. Three new `App` hooks expose the events with no-op defaults; apps that ignore them get the previous behaviour. `xdg-activation-v1`. The global is bound optionally; when it is present, `try_run` reads `$XDG_ACTIVATION_TOKEN` from the environment, removes it immediately (single-use; preventing leaks into child processes) and stashes it on `AppData::activation_token_pending`. After the first successful configure of the main surface — the earliest point at which `xdg_activation_v1.activate` is meaningful — the token is consumed once and the surface raised to focus. Compositors without the global leave `activation_state` as `None` and the inbound path silently degrades. An `App::request_activation_token` outbound path is reserved on the trait but not yet exercised here. HarfBuzz shaping. A new `src/text_shaping.rs::shape_line` drives both renderers: the logical-order string is run through `unicode-bidi`, split into per-font sub-runs, and shaped through `rustybuzz`. Each `PositionedGlyph` carries the per-font `glyph_id`, the visual advance and the ink offsets — exactly what `fontdue::Font::rasterize_indexed` needs to render Arabic connected forms, Devanagari clusters and CJK shaped glyphs correctly. The GLES atlas is re-keyed on `(glyph_id, size_bits, font_id)` so glyphs from different fonts at the same size no longer collide, and the atlas format is selected per ES profile (`GL_R8` / `GL_RED` on ES3, `GL_LUMINANCE` on ES2) — the fragment shader samples `.r` for both, since `GL_LUMINANCE` replicates the coverage byte into `.r=.g=.b`. Software path follows the same key. New `Cargo.toml` deps: `unicode-bidi = "0.3"`, `rustybuzz = "0.14"`. Multi-touch hooks. `App::on_touch_down / on_touch_move / on_touch_up( id, x, y )` expose the raw `wl_touch.id` of every secondary finger. The first finger to land remains the *primary slot* and is fed through the regular gesture machine (`on_pointer_*`, swipe, scroll, long-press, drag-and-drop). Every additional finger fires the new callbacks instead, leaving the existing single-slot behaviour untouched for apps that do not override them. This is the substrate for app-defined pinch-zoom / two-finger pan; the toolkit itself does not yet ship a built-in pinch gesture (called out in the same "Known gaps" doc section). `event_loop::frame` extracted from `draw/mod.rs`. The `draw_frame` orchestrator and its per-format SHM helper (`pick_shm_format`) move into `src/event_loop/frame.rs`, leaving `draw/` strictly responsible for per-surface paint primitives. The import in `event_loop/run.rs` is rewritten accordingly; `draw/mod.rs` shrinks from 192-line orchestrator to a thin module index. Overlay teardown safety. `AppData::discard_overlay( id )` synchronously removes a destroyed overlay from the map and rewrites every per-device focus that pointed at it (pointer, keyboard, every touch slot), migrating an in-flight long-press drag to the main surface the same way `reconcile_overlays` does. Used by the compositor-driven destruction paths (`PopupHandler::done`, `LayerShellHandler::closed`) where waiting for the next reconcile would leave a window in which `surface()` / `surface_mut()` panic. The non-panicking siblings `try_surface` / `try_surface_mut` are added for callers on async dispatch paths (IME `Done`, tooltip arm) that may race a teardown. Miscellaneous. CI: `master` → `main` to match the actual default branch. `Makefile` adds `cargo run --example dialog` to the examples target. `src/lib.rs` re-exports `widget::scroll::ScrollAxis` so apps can configure a `scroll()` axis without reaching into a `pub(crate)` module. `Cargo.toml` adds `accesskit = "0.17"` and `accesskit_unix = "0.13"`. `docs/architecture.md` gains the "Known gaps and non-goals" section that enumerates the new capabilities, what still ships flat, and what is deferred (per-widget a11y labels, primary selection, intra-process multi-touch gestures, `wp_fractional_scale_v1`). |
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| 4aa3480b64 |
refactor: split every monolithic module into focused submodules
Each source file that had grown beyond a single concern is replaced by an identically-named directory containing focused submodules. `src/event_loop/mod.rs` (878 lines) becomes a directory with clipboard, context_menu, cursor_shape, drag, focus, handlers, invalidation, overlays_reconcile, repeat, run, surface, text_editing, and tooltip. Every widget, input handler, and theme component follows the same split. Public interfaces are unchanged — only the internal file layout moves. image bumped from 0.25.2 to 0.25.9. |
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| dc781fb78d |
event_loop: client binding for ext-foreign-toplevel-list-v1
Adds an `App` callback that delivers the live list of open toplevels from the compositor — the data source a shell needs for dock running-app indicators, taskbar tiles, alt-tab and any other "what is currently running" UI. Hand-wiring the protocol binding from every shell that wants it is the kind of boilerplate ltk should absorb once: this is that move.
`Cargo.toml` adds `"staging"` to `wayland-protocols`' feature list. SCTK 0.20 already pulls staging in transitively (it carries `foreign_toplevel_list.rs` and its own dispatch helper), so this is belt-and-braces against a future ltk tree that swaps SCTK for a different client toolkit — it keeps the protocol available crate-wide even then. `src/app.rs` introduces `ToplevelEvent { Opened { id: u32, app_id: String }, Closed { id: u32 } }` and `App::on_toplevel_event( &self, ToplevelEvent ) -> Option<Self::Message>` with the default returning `None` so apps that do not care pay nothing (no allocation, no dispatch). `id` is the Wayland protocol id of the handle proxy — unique per session, stable for the handle's lifetime, the same value paired across `Opened` and `Closed`. `src/lib.rs` re-exports `ToplevelEvent` from the public prelude.
`src/event_loop/app_data.rs` grows a `pub foreign_toplevel_list: ForeignToplevelList` field. `src/event_loop/mod.rs` constructs it via `ForeignToplevelList::new( &globals, &qh )` and stores it on `AppData`. If the compositor does not advertise the global the inner `GlobalProxy` just resolves to "absent" and the list yields no toplevels — no error path needed at construction. `src/event_loop/handlers.rs` adds the `Proxy` import, `delegate_foreign_toplevel_list!( @<A: App> AppData<A> )` next to the rest, and implements `ForeignToplevelListHandler` for `AppData<A>`. The three SCTK callbacks (`new_toplevel`, `update_toplevel`, `toplevel_closed`) each pull the handle's protocol id and its currently-cached `app_id` from the list's info cache, call `self.app.on_toplevel_event( … )`, and push the returned message onto `pending_msgs` so it flows through the normal `update` cycle with the regular `invalidate_after` scoping path. `update_toplevel` re-emits `Opened` with the latest info — compositors fire this on title changes too, not just `app_id` changes, but apps whose state is keyed on `(id, app_id)` can absorb the repeat idempotently and apps that need title-change granularity can scope via `invalidate_after`.
The wire-up is generic: a shell that wants finer behaviour (focus follow, per-title indicators, multi-window grouping) can layer on top by translating the event into more specific app messages. The default app pays zero, the shell that opts in gets a real event stream without touching `smithay-client-toolkit` directly.
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| bbab5e238d | First commit. Version 0.1.0 |