To prevent wl_keyboard keymap being written to by clients, use a unique
file descriptor for each wl_keyboard resource.
Reference: weston, commit 76829fc4eaea329d2a525c3978271e13bd76c078
sx, sy used to store the buffer offset of the drag surface which was
then be added (by rootston) to the drag icon position.
Buffer offsets are handled already in surface_intersect_output
(output.c) so they were added twice for dnd surfaces.
A few pedantic changes and unused variables (1-4), and genuine bugs (5,
6).
The reports with the corresponding files and lines numbers are as
follows.
1. backend/libinput/tablet_pad.c@31,44,57
"Allocator sizeof operand mismatch"
"Result of 'calloc' is converted to a pointer of type 'unsigned int',
which is incompatible with sizeof operand type 'int'"
2. types/tablet_v2/wlr_tablet_v2_pad.c@371
"Allocator sizeof operand mismatch"
"Result of 'calloc' is converted to a pointer of type 'uint32_t', which
is incompatible with sizeof operand type 'int'"
3. types/wlr_cursor.c@335
"Dead initialization"
"Value stored to 'dx'/'dy' during its initialization is never read"
4. rootston/xdg_shell.c@510
"Dead initialization"
"Value stored to 'desktop' during its initialization is never read"
5. types/tablet_v2/wlr_tablet_v2_pad.c@475
"Dereference of null pointer"
"Access to field 'strips' results in a dereference of a null pointer
(loaded from field 'current_client')"
The boolean logic was incorrect (c.f. the check in the following
function).
6. examples/idle.c@163,174,182
"Uninitialized argument value"
"1st function call argument is an uninitialized value"
If close_timeout != 0, but simulate_activity_timeout >= close_timeout,
the program would segfault at pthread_cancel(t1).
After destroying a keyboard input device, seat's listeners could still be pointing to destroyed wlr_input_device signals. This patch makes sure the references are removed while the input device is being destroyed.
Implement the tablet-v2 tablet tool's implicit grab semantics for
buttons and tip.
This avoids losing focus (to other [sub]surfaces) when a button is held,
or the tip is down.
This should help when the device is used close to a surface's border and
would otherwise have to be very precise.