Stop using private implementation details of the `formatter<std::tm>`.
We never needed anything from the class besides the format specifier,
which is easily obtainable with public API.
Implement a wrapper over Glib::Dispatcher that passes the arguments to
the signal consumer via synchronized `std::queue`.
Arguments are always passed by value and the return type of the signal
is expected to be `void`.
The changes in GCC 11.x made `std::condition_variable` implementation
internals `noexcept`. `noexcept` is known to interact particularly bad
with `pthread_cancel`, i.e. `__cxxabiv1::__force_unwind` passing through
the `noexcept` call stack frame causes a `std::terminate` call and
immediate termination of the program
Digging through the GCC ML archives[1] lead me to the idea of patching
this with a few pthread_setcancelstate's. As bad as the solution is, it
seems to be the best we can do within C++17 limits and without major
rework.
[1]: https://gcc.gnu.org/legacy-ml/gcc/2017-08/msg00156.html
(Fixes #358.)
Subprocesses created for custom module scripts were previously left
running when the parent Waybar process exited. This patch sets the
parent-death signal of child processes (PR_SET_PDEATHSIG on Linux,
PROC_PDEATHSIG_CTL on FreeBSD) to SIGTERM.
Caveats:
* This uses Linux-specific or FreeBSD-specific calls. I don’t know if
this project targets other systems?
* There is a possibility that Waybar exits after calling `fork()`, but
before calling `prctl` to set the parent-death signal. In this case,
the child will not receive the SIGTERM signal and will continue to
run. I did not handle this case as I consider it quite unlikely, since
module scripts are usually launched only when Waybar starts. Please
let me know if you think it needs to be handled.
Testing:
* With `htop` open, run Waybar v0.9.5 with a custom module that has an
`exec` script. Terminate the Waybar process and notice that the
script’s subprocess stays alive and is now a child of the init
process.
* Run Waybar with this patch and follow the same steps as above. Notice
that this time the script’s subprocess terminates when the parent
exits.
Open rfkill device only once per module.
Remove rfkill threads and use `Glib::signal_io` as a more efficient way
to poll the rfkill device.
Handle runtime errors from rfkill and stop polling of the device instead
of crashing waybar.
Other units are all uppercased, so using an uppercased "K" makes it look more consistent (especially when {bandwidthUpBits} or something like that is used).
When forkExec is called it begins to ignore all SIGCHLD signals for
the rest of the progam's execution so that they are automatically
reaped. However, this means that subsequent waitpid calls in the exec
function will always fail. So instead handle SIGCHLD by reaping any
processes created by forkExec and ignoring all others so that they can be
handled directly by the exec function.
In file included from ../src/modules/custom.cpp:1:
In file included from ../include/modules/custom.hpp:7:
../include/util/command.hpp:15:25: error: implicit instantiation of undefined template 'std::__1::array<char, 128>'
std::array<char, 128> buffer = {0};
^
../src/modules/pulseaudio.cpp:175:41: error: implicit instantiation of undefined template 'std::__1::array<std::__1::basic_string<char>, 9>'
static const std::array<std::string, 9> ports = {
^
/usr/include/c++/v1/__tuple:223:64: note: template is declared here
template <class _Tp, size_t _Size> struct _LIBCPP_TEMPLATE_VIS array;
^
In file included from ../src/factory.cpp:1:
In file included from ../include/factory.hpp:8:
../include/modules/sway/workspaces.hpp:39:8: error: no template named 'unordered_map' in namespace 'std'
std::unordered_map<std::string, Gtk::Button> buttons_;
~~~~~^
../src/factory.cpp:20:14: error: cannot initialize return object of type 'waybar::AModule *' with an rvalue of type 'waybar::modules::sway::Workspaces *'
return new waybar::modules::sway::Workspaces(id, bar_, config_[name]);
^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
This patch adds 3 new configuration options applicable for
subclasses of ALabel. The options can be used to execute
user defined code in response to the 3 mouse events:
* on-click: The left mouse button click
* on-scroll-up
* on-scroll-down
This patch also modifies the behaviour of the format-alt toggle
such that when the on-click event is configured, format-alt is
toggled on any mouse click other than left click. When on-click
is not defined, any mouse button would toggle format-alt.
Signed-off-by: Harish Krupo <harishkrupo@gmail.com>