All modules now expose their actions as public static constants
Issues: The menu module no longer closes when an item is clicked (before
it would intercept any executed command and look if it matches one of
its exec commands)
This allows us to identify module by their type and it is also better to
store the module type as part of the module instead of having it
hardcoded in factory.hpp
Action strings now have the form '#MODULE#ACTION'
For example to trigger the action 'toggle' in the 'module/date' module
one would now use '%{A1:#date#toggle:}'
With this action strings can now be uniquely assigned to one module.
Fixes#1172
ramp-0 is used for everything <= base-temperature and ramp-N is used for everything >= warn-temperature
* [Temperature, Ramp] fix wrong icon for temperatures near base and warn temps
* [Temperature, Ramp] fix wrong icon for temperatures near base and warn temps
* Fix minor error
* explicitly check percentage in get_by_percentage_with_borders
* Fixed silly error
Any timer_module based module would sleep for the set interval and then
continue running. Depending on the start time of polybar this
sleep pattern might not be aligned, which causes such modules to always
update in a shifted manner.
Consider the date module as an example. If the update interval is set to
60 seconds and polybar was started at 13:37:37, polybar would update the
clock at 13:38:37, 13:39:37 and so on.
To make matters worse, if a module would perform lengthy checks this
interval might drift over time, causing even more inconsistent updating.
This patch extends the base module with a sleep_until method that calls
the corresponding function on the sleephandler. Additionally the
timer_module is extended to compute the remaining time until the next
interval passes and sleep accordingly.
Closes#2064
Co-developed-by: Dominik Töllner <dominik.toellner@stud.uni-hannover.de>
Co-authored-by: Malte Bargholz <malte@screenri.de>
If an input is enqueued as a response to an input, the new input will be
swallowed because it will likely be enqueued less than 30ms after the
original event.
This is not something that is an issue right now but it is required to
finish #1907 where, in order to close the menu after a click, the menu
module gets an exec action that closes the menu and adds a command to
the event queue.
The setting also isn't too useful since it will just break polybar input
handling if inputs arrive too fast instead of (possibly) slowing down
the bar.
Before the module would just try to evenly distribute desktops
(workspaces) among the viewports.
But since `_NET_DESKTOP_VIEWPORT` actually maps desktops to viewports,
we can use that information to assign workspaces to the right viewport.
Fixes#1849Fixes#1764
A warning implies something went wrong and (possibly) the user should do
something about it. However, warnings are not always used this way.
For example:
* When a fallback value for a `${..}` reference is used, this shouldn't
produce a warning (or notice) since using fallbacks is not something
bad.
* pulse telling you that it uses the default sink because no sink was
specified also does not warrant a warning (even notice may be too
high).
* Whenever polybar shuts down it produces a "Termination signal
received..." warning. Since there isn't a more proper way to shut down
polybar, it should not produce a warning. Same argument for a
`screenchange-reload`
Before it would only reload if the size changed and even that was
reliable since the method relied on the order of the monitor list.
Now if the monitor list differs in any way (pos, dimension, primary,
output, name) a reload is issued
Because of how monitors are removed inside the loop and depending on the
monitor order a cloned monitor may be assigned a width of 0 but is never
actually removed resulting in polybar saying the bar is out of bounds
Fixes#1794
Premature optimization that tried to cache monitors but the cache did
not take into account the parameter values.
The call `get_monitors(..., ..., false, true);` would get all connected
and unconncected monitors a subsequent call
`get_monitors(..., ..., true, false);` would get back the same list of
monitors even though it requested only connected monitors.
Additionally `get_monitors` is never called periodically so the
optimization really didn't help much.
The github module only authenticate by query string, and this method is deprecated:
https://developer.github.com/changes/2019-11-05-deprecated-passwords-and-authorizations-api/#authenticating-using-query-parameters
There is no reason to remove it before the method stop working, so I've made possible to the user choose which authentication method he will use:
* The parameter token remain unchanged.
* If the parameter user is passed then the module will use the not deprecated method, passing user and token on the body of the requisition. Otherwise the module will use the deprecated method.
Co-authored-by: Lucas <araujo.lucasvale@gmail.com>
Fixes#2002
Adds `format-offline` and `label-offline`
* feat(github): offline label & fixes
* Clear label if there are no notifications and empty-notifications = false
* clang-format
Co-authored-by: Patrick Ziegler <p.ziegler96@gmail.com>
This is dependent on a PR to xpp that does the same. Newer compilers
(GCC10 in particular) are stricter about which headers provide the
std exception types.
the `node` and `node_repeat` were never called with the optional
parameter add_space. And its default value is false, so the
corresponding code was never used.
I think in general it is better to just have the user of those functions
call `builder::space` when they need to instead of adding more
complexity to the `node*` functions.
* Add label minlen and alignment.
Fix build
* Update src/drawtypes/label.cpp
Co-Authored-By: infokiller <infokiller@users.noreply.github.com>
* Use existing alignment type.
* Remove redundant max_len handling in label::get.
* Fix shadowing.
* Add label alignment tests.
* Handle minlen/maxlen and alignment in same function.
Also add a test for a test case brought up in the PR discussion.
* Format files with clang-format
* Move builder::get_label_text tests into label tests
builder::get_label_text doesn't really do anything anymore
* builder: remove get_label_text
* label: Clean up label::get()
* Fix comment style.
* Set default label alignment to left.
* Update src/drawtypes/label.cpp
Co-Authored-By: Patrick Ziegler <p.ziegler96@gmail.com>
* Update include/drawtypes/label.hpp
Co-Authored-By: Patrick Ziegler <p.ziegler96@gmail.com>
None of the payload fields seem to be used. They were the only place
where EVENT_SIZE was used and why it had to be a macro (no variable
length arrays).
Since APP_VERSION is different for every commit and almost all file
include settings.hpp, the whole project has to be rebuilt for every
commit. With this, hopefully, this can be greatly reduced and only
changed files need to be rebuilt. This will also help ccache
Some people use text modules instead of the `separator` key in the bar
section to better configure the separator (colors, fonts).
Since we disallowed the same module being used multiple times in #1534,
this will now print an error message.
This should help with this a bit.
Ref #1913
Since all of polybar is built at once, there is no chance that this is
ever linked to an object that was compiled with another `-std=`
Ref: https://stackoverflow.com/a/46857525/5363071
Some WMs like i3 discard position information when unmapping the bar and
because of that the bar would be at the wrong position after being
remapped.
Fixes#1484
Ref: https://github.com/i3/i3/pull/3834
* refactor: Use flat module list if possible
Before if you wanted to iterate over all loaded modules you had to first
iterate over all blocks and then over their modules even if you didn't
care about alignment.
* refactor: setup modules in separate function
* controller: Print error for duplicate modules
You can't use the same name twice inside the module lists
E.g.
modules-left = a b c
modules-center = a
modules-right = b
would print an error.
We only print an error for now because we don't want to break existing
configs. But in the future this should be properly enforced.
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