This fixes issue #610 by reading bandwidth usage per-interface from
/proc/net/dev instead of globally via /proc/net/netstat. It supports the
same matching logic as elsewhere, so setting interface to '*' should
display the same sum-total bandwidth usage as the previous
implementation.
On the `Passive` value of `Status` tray items would be hidden unless
`show-passive-items` is set to true.
On the `NeedsAttention` value of `Status` tray items will have a
`.needs-attention` CSS class.
In a system with multiple sinks, the default sink may not always be
the once currently being used. It is more useful to control the
currently active sink rather than an unused one.
This patch does not make any difference if the system only uses the
default sink.
Signed-off-by: Roosembert Palacios <roosemberth@posteo.ch>
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
IFLA_CARRIER allows to know when a cable is plugged to the Ethernet
card or when the WiFi is connected. If there's no carrier, the
interface will be considered disconnected.
Last part of the rework of handleEvents(), this time we take the
getExternalInterface() function and add it to the handleEvents()
function. That way, waybar can react immediately when a new "external
interface" is available and doesn't need to probe. Also that avoid to
have two different functions consuming from the same socket and we
don't need to recode some of the functions that are already available
via libnl (to send and receive messages).
In order to get the IP address of an interface, we can get the
information out of NEWADDR events without needed to call getifaddrs().
And when now events are expected, we can requests a dump of all
addresses and handle addresses changes the same way via handleEvents()
only.
Instead of using an alternative way to list all links in order to
choose one when an "interface" is in the configuration, we can ask for
a dump of all interface an reuse the handleEvents() function.
This patch also start to rework the handleEvents() function to grab
more information out of each event, like the interface name.
Rewrites window title according to config option "rewrite".
"rewrite" is an object where keys are regular expressions and values are
rewrite rules if the expression matches. Rules may contain references to
captures of the expression. Regex and replacement follow ECMA-script
rules. If no regex matches, the title is left unchanged.
example:
"sway/window": {
"rewrite": {
"(.*) - Mozilla Firefox": " $1",
"(.*) - zsh": " $1",
}
}
(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.