IME text events can result in sending duplicate key press events, which will result in undesired repeated key presses. Since the events are exact duplicates, compare the serials to filter out redundant key down events.
The Module interface is the one used by the outside world. This code
is inside the module itself so can use the internal name, avoiding the
need to export this function on the Module at all.
See https://github.com/emscripten-core/emscripten/pull/24269
The xserver will still send EnterNotify events while the pointer is captured, and the grab shouldn't be updated in these cases, as it will cause the capture to be lost.
If it is known that the window will immediately enter fullscreen upon being shown, set the borderless style when showing the window to hide the borders, or they may linger in the background if the client takes some time to draw the first frame.
Unnecessarily calling ShowWindow with SW_RESTORE when applying the window flags must be suppressed in this case, or the borders can reappear in a weird, partial state.
sdl2-compat will call SDL_GetDisplayForWindow() when querying the display to use for fullscreen, which won't always be correct if the backend can't actually reposition the window. When calling this function, get the ideal fullscreen display and store it in a property for retrieval by sdl2-compat.
Mouse button events that trigger a hit test are not passed to the client, but the client may still query the global mouse button state from within the hit test handler, so the reported buttons need to be accurate. Query the buttons directly from the seat instead of the higher global mouse state to match the behavior of other platforms.
The low 16-bits of the message extra info is an event sequence number when using the Wacom tablet with Windows Ink disabled. The high bits of normal mouse motion when using touch input match the touch signature, 0xFF515700. The high bits of raw input mouse motion when using touch input do not match that signature, so we have to check for the touch bit in that case.
Fixes https://github.com/libsdl-org/SDL/issues/12927
The problems are two-fold. When this happens a WM_POINTERDOWN event is sent with IS_POINTER_INCONTACT_WPARAM() evaluating as true. So when SDL_SendPenButton() is sent for the barrel button, there is no pen in contact yet, so the right mouse button is sent. Then SDL_SendPenTouch() is sent, which generates a left button press event.
Fixes https://github.com/libsdl-org/SDL/issues/12926
These events fire for other things, such as pressing a barrel button while
the pen is hovering.
The correct thing to do is check IS_POINTER_INCONTACT_WPARAM in the event.
If the pen is already touching or not, SDL_SendPenTouch() will do the right
thing, so it's safe to call it even if we're already in the right state.
By default, popups are automatically constrained to be completely within display bounds, so as not to cut off information and result in an unusable menu, or unreadable tooltip. In some cases, however, this is not wanted, so a property to toggle this behavior is added.
There are also cases where the client may not want a popup menu to implicitly grab the keyboard focus, as is the default behavior, so popup menus now respect the focusable flag/property, as well as being able to toggle focus grabbing via SDL_SetWindowFocusable().
When showing or hiding a popup menu, manually check and set the focus if the new topmost window under the cursor is an SDL window. Otherwise, the focus won't be updated until the cursor is actually moved.
There is a quirk with XInput2 mouse capture that causes a leave event to be sent if the pointer moves out->in->out, which breaks mouse tracking outside the window. If the mouse leaves the window with buttons pressed, continue tracking it until the buttons are released.
- IsIconic/IsZoomed must be checked after sending SDL_EVENT_WINDOW_SHOWN as that may trigger window operations if any are pending from when
the window was hidden. e.g. the window may be shown, which triggers SDL_MaximizeWindow and a new WM_WINDOWPOSCHANGED where
SDL_EVENT_WINDOW_MAXIMIZED is sent, then control returns to the original WM_WINDOWPOSCHANGED which would not think the window is zoomed
and send SDL_EVENT_WINDOW_RESTORED.
According to the documentation and testing the `emscripten_webgl_create_context` function returns `0` on error as oppposed to a negative number. This was causing the error message to be empty when the later `emscripten_webgl_make_context_current` call fails given the invalid context.
See https://emscripten.org/docs/api_reference/html5.h.html#c.emscripten_webgl_create_context
Xfce, unlike every other window manager in existence, sends ConfigureNotify events before PropertyNotify events when toggling the fullscreen and maximized window state. Check the window state when handling ConfigureNotify events, and defer emitting SDL size/position events until the corresponding PropertyNotify event arrives, since SDL and clients expect to get the window state before the new size and position.
Wayland compositors may send recursive clipboard offers to the client, which need to be filtered out to avoid clearing local data. Previously this was worked around with a hack, but this caused the ownership flag to be set incorrectly, which broke some clients.
This introduces a metadata MIME type of application/x-sdl3-source-id to be sent with SDL3 selection offers, which contains a string that is a unique identifier for the instance, and can be used to detect if a received selection offer is originating from the same instance that generated it.
If DBus is available, the unique identifier string is the unique name of the connection, otherwise, the process ID is used.
If a window isn't resizable from specific directions, the compositor can inform clients of the current edge constraints, so they don't display resize cursors for non-resizable edges.
Wayland environments can expose more than one seat for multiple collections of input devices, which can include multiple, simultaneously active, desktop pointers and keyboards with independent layouts. The Wayland input backend previously presumed that only one seat could exist, which caused broken behavior if the compositor exposed more than one, which is possible on wlroots based compositors such as Sway. This introduces support for handling multiple seats, including proper handling of dynamically added and removed seats and capabilities at run time.
The SDL Wayland input system was accreted over time, and the assumption that only one seat will ever exist resulted in state and related objects not always being tied to their most appropriate owner in a multi-seat scenario, so refactoring was required to manage several bits of state per-seat, instead of per-window or globally.
As Wayland keyboards can have per-seat layouts, fast keymap switching is required when multiplexing input from multiple seats to the global SDL keyboard device. A parameter was added to the keymap creation function to specify if the keymap lifetime should be externally managed to facilitate keymap reuse, and some layout info was moved from the global keyboard state to the keymap state to avoid unnecessarily redetermining it whenever a reused keymap is bound. This reduces the overhead of switching keymaps to setting a single pointer.
Multiple seats also means that multiple windows can have keyboard and/or mouse focus at the same time on some compositors, but this is not currently a well-handled case in SDL, and will require more work to support, if necessary.