A workspace is occupied if it is not active and there is at least one window managed by the WM (`_NET_CLIENT_LIST`) that has set `_NET_WM_DESKTOP` to that workspace.
The behavior when `_NET_WM_DESKTOP` is not set is not yet clear but this is unlikely to happen since most WMs will position windows on some desktop.
Closes#874Fixes#1444Fixes#1033
* Set Desktop OCCUPIED if a window moves there
This covers more of an edge-case. I did this first by accident, it might
vanish later on.
* Replace tracking change of WS with currently used WS
* Untrack occupied workspaces
* Track windows and their desktops in pairs
* Match type of occupied_desktops with current_desktop
Because the index needs to be matched later on, type mismatches would be non-ideal.
* Recreate the occupied desktops everytime and remove duplicates
* Readd support for moving windows to other desktops
* Use less characters to empty the vector
* Rename variable storing the desktops
* Recount windows on every occasion
This alone simplifies the management and the lookup for occupation of a
workspace
* Keep track of number of windows in every workspace
* Add debugging output that shall be removed before merging
* Remove obsolete TODO
* m_client_list should always be diff'd, since the desktop may change
Therefore we update the desktop-count tally every time the client_list
changes. It may just be a desktop-change without a change of
clients.size()...
* Add more logging-spam to understand window/desktop lifecycle
* Lock event-handler to serialize handling of events
* Fix occupied workspace counting and change to bool array
Also, performance improvements when diffing new and old client lists
* Fix crash when all clients are removed
* Conform to linter and styleguide
* Shorten conditional as it is standard enough
Since this only guards against 0-divisions, it can be shortened
without risking too much confusion down the road.
* Guard against multiple threads accessing and modifying data
Fixes#1444
Modification of internal data happens through the handle-method, while
the build-method tries to access the data structures for display. Since
some modifications clear e.g. the m_viewports, references may become
invalid between looping over them an accessing them.
The mutex should guard against this simultanuous access.
* Do not 'adopt_lock', because calls come from very different threads
To my understanding, adopt_lock has some dependency on the mutex-ownership. Since
the lock is once called from the inside (in handle) and once from the outside (in
build), there might be a problem. After brief testing, the segfaults happened fewer
times.
See #1444
* Also listen to _NET_WM_DESKTOP
In order to move a window from one desktop to another, it is sufficient
to set the desktop-property of that window. xmonad fires a lot of events
in the case of moving a window, herbstluftwm only updates the
_NET_WM_DESKTOP-atom of the window.
This change reloads the clientlist in order to correctly set the
desktop state "occupied".
* Describe need and use of mutex
It might be possible to relieve the guard in xworkspaces_module::handle,
but I am unsure about this. Since xmonad emits a lot of events on almost
every minor change, I would let the guard keep its post, avoiding
race-conditions in event-handling.
* Give temporary variables better names
* Clarify purpose of loop
About 80% of this comment are taken from
https://github.com/jaagr/polybar/pull/882#discussion_r255317363
* Remove merge-remainder
* Use a simpler method to list occupied desktops.
Co-authored-by: Jérôme Boulmier <jerome.boulmier@outlook.fr>
* Document m_clients field
Was around since the first commit but no documentation why. It was only
used in the text module and doesn't appear in any public documentation,
so this doesn't break anything.
Displays real percentage instead of being set to 100 if percentage > full-at
* battery: added percentage_raw token, which ignores full-at
* battery: current_percentage returns raw, added clamping function instead
* battery: clamp percentage used by build()
Made clamp_percentage() const to allow its usage inside build()
* battery: read and return percentage in one line
* `layout-icon-*` list that maps layouts to icons.
* `indicator-icon-*` list that maps indicators to off and on icons
* `label-indicator-off`
* `label-indicator-on` which replaces the now deprecated `label-indicator`
* `label-indicator-[on|off]-*` for each indicator. Overrides `label-indicator-on` and `label-indicator-off`
Fixes#1558Closes#1048
* add icon support for xkeyboard layouts
* removed unneeded #include
* add sperate %icon% token that can be used in <label-layout>
* removed unneeded #include
* added caps lock indicator (was mentioned in wiki, but not actually implememnted) and support for indicator icons
* a few more fixes to make sure existing user configs are not broken
* ready to go
* Added an option to replace xkb indicator names
* Added labels for each indicator state
* Removed print left on accident
* Fixed review comments
* Update src/modules/xkeyboard.cpp
Co-Authored-By: Gilnaa <gilad@naaman.io>
This adds `monitor-exact = true` in the bar section
This also properly does best-match instead of first-match if multiple
matches exists. For example if there are two monitors HDMI2 and HDMI-2
and we try to match HDMI-2 with monitor-exact = false, until now HDMI2
would be matched. Now exact matches are always preferred.
Fixes#1532
This adds a new label in the bspwm module `label-marked`
This flag for focused nodes of a focused desktop was introduced in [1]
and released with bspwm 0.9.4
It adds the `M` flag to `G` type items in bspwm's report format
Resolves#1552
[1]: d0138af475
If a tailed command is used polybar would generate two action tags, one
with %counter% replaced and one with %pid% replaced, but never both
This is a bug that was introduced in #934
Now all the tokens in the memory module also have ramp and bar counterparts.
These can be used exactly the same as `bar-used` and `ramp-used`, they are named `<bar-swap-used>`, `<bar-swap-free>`, `<ramp-swap-used>`, and `<ramp-swap-free>`
Trimming the quotes in labels and the date module are not needed at all,
because surrounding quotes are removed when loading the values from the
config.
Removing the quotes in the builder also doesn't seem to serve any
purpose at all.
The repeatone button doesn't influence repeating behaviour at all, so
the name is misleading.
This deprecates icon-repeatone for now, until we can completely remove
it
Fixes#1279
It's queried the same way ipv4 addresses are queried, but here it displays globally routable addresses. If there are multiple such addresses, it picks one (same as with ipv4). It's possible that an address discovered this way is not in fact globally reachable but still marked as global.
atoi, atof and so on have undefined behavior if anything goes wrong. We
now use strto*, but without error checking. In most places overflows and
the like *should* not happen. String to number conversions are only used
when reading data from other applications or from the config, if another
application gives unparsable strings or too large numbers, then most
likely there is something wrong with that application. If the error
comes from the user config, then the user has to live with values
provided by strto* on error (which are very reasonable)
Fixes#1201