Center the frame around the first pointer found and then update all pointers
on the same screen to move to the edges (if necessary).
Note: xf86WarpCursor needs to be modified, is using deprecated
miPointerWarpCursor and will kill the server when called with
inputInfo.pointer.
Let the drivers only generate XI events and put those into the event queue.
When processing events, generate core events as needed. This fixes a number of
problems with XKB and the DIX in general.
The previous approach was to put core events and XI events as separate events
into the event queue. When being processed, the server had no knowledge of
them coming from the same device state change. Anything that would then change
the state of the device accordingly was in danger of changing it twice,
leading to some funny (i.e. not funny at all) results.
Emulating core events while processing XI events fixes this, there is only one
path that actually changes the device state now. Although we have to be
careful when replaying events from synced devices, otherwise we may lose
events.
Note: XI has precedence over core for passive grabs, but core events are
delivered to the client first.
This removes the wrapping added in 340911d724
We need it unconditionally in a few places, and the rest checked for NULL and
then set it to VCK anyway. So, fixing up all callers to appreciate the defined
return value.
Not sure what I was thinking when I wrote this... it would cause the box
coordinates to be off for exaCopyNtoNTwoDir or fallbacks.
Thanks to Tilman Sauerbeck for pointing out the problem on IRC and testing the
fix.
Matches linuxPci.c changes made in 8279444a54
Fixes compiler errors:
"ix86Pci.c", line 194: too many struct/union initializers
"ix86Pci.c", line 204: too many struct/union initializers
"ix86Pci.c", line 214: too many struct/union initializers
Instead of hardcoding CoreProcessPointerEvent, actually try to unwrap properly
and then call the unwrapped processInputProc. Seems to be a better idea,
especially since it makes stuff actually work...
Followup to [1].
If a core grab causes the device to freeze, it overwrites the processInputProc
of the device. [1] would then overwrite this while unwrapping, the device
does not thaw anymore.
Changing this to only re-wrap if the processInputProc hasn't been changed
during the event handling.
[1] 340911d724
When processing events from the EQ, _always_ call the processInputProc of the
matching device. For XI devices, this proc is wrapped in three layers.
Core event handling is wrapped by XI event handling, which is wrapped by XKB.
A core event now passes through XKB -> XI -> DIX.
This gets rid of a sync'd grab problem: with the previous code, core events
did disappear during a sync'd device grab on account of mieqProcessInputEvents
calling the processInputProc of the VCP/VCK instead of the actual device. This
lead to the event being processed as normal instead of being enqueued for
later replaying.
Even though they're defined to zero by the spec, we've seen an EDID block
where the (empty) ASCII strings were stuffed in a byte early, leading to the
descriptor being considered a detailed timing instead.
GenericEvents can't be parsed to keyButtonPointer, and there's no guarantee
that it has a time field anyway. PlayReleasedEvent needs to store the millis
when we know it (core events, XI event) and just re-use them for GenericEvents.
Yes, this is a hack. But it looks like the time has zero significance anyway.