There are a number of XKB requests needed to request all the information from
the X11 server. So far, the code was sending one request and waiting for the
reply. This commit starts batching the request so that we get multiple replies
with one round trip.
This removes three round trips.
Only the simple requests are converted. get_map() and get_names() use some
bitmasks that are needed for both the request and the reply. These will be dealt
with separately.
Signed-off-by: Uli Schlachter <psychon@znc.in>
Instead of asking for an atom name and waiting for the reply four times, this
now sends four GetAtomName requests and waits for all the replies at once. Thus,
this saves three round trips.
Signed-off-by: Uli Schlachter <psychon@znc.in>
On my system, calling xkb_x11_keymap_new_from_device() did 78 round trips to the
X11 server, which seems excessive. This commit brings this number down to about
9 to 10 round trips.
The existing functions adopt_atom() and adopt_atoms() guarantee that the atom
was adopted by the time they return. Thus, each call to these functions must do
a round-trip. However, none of the callers need this guarantee.
This commit makes "atom adopting" asynchronous: Only some time later is the atom
actually adopted. Until then, it is in some pending "limbo" state.
This actually fixes a TODO in the comments.
Fixes: https://github.com/xkbcommon/libxkbcommon/issues/216
Signed-off-by: Uli Schlachter <psychon@znc.in>
A simple script that creates a new layout with the given keysym replacing TLDE.
Then we compile a keymap and search for the keysym being assigned to TLDE and
bail if that fails.
The list of keysyms is manually maintained but we only need to add one or two to
spot-check whenever the xorgproto is updated.
Signed-off-by: Peter Hutterer <peter.hutterer@who-t.net>
As of xorgproto commit 5dbb5b76597f [1], the 0x10081XXX keycode range is defined
for direct evdev kernel keycode mapping. For example, KEY_MACRO1 (0x290) is
mapped to 0x10081290. The format of the #define lines for these keys is
stable to allow for parsing:
#define XF86XK_FooBar _EVDEVK(0x123) /* optional comment */
Update our script so we detect these new lines. Our keysym generation is a
two-step process: makeheader and then makekeys. Replacing the key with its full
value in the makeheader script means we don't have to update makekeys to handle
the _EVDEVK macro and our header file is fully resolved.
[1] https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/xorg/proto/xorgproto/-/merge_requests/23
Signed-off-by: Peter Hutterer <peter.hutterer@who-t.net>
rmlvos is the parent list which then fails during a list join because, well,
it's a list of lists.
Fixes#206
Signed-off-by: Peter Hutterer <peter.hutterer@who-t.net>
Makes this test easier to run from the commandline. Where either of top_srcdir
or top_builddir isn't set, fill them in from the CWD or fail otherwise.
Signed-off-by: Peter Hutterer <peter.hutterer@who-t.net>
On every keymap notify event, the keymap should be refreshed, which
fetches the required X11 atoms. A big keymap might have a few hundred of
atoms.
A profile by a user has shown this *might* be slow when some intensive
amount of keymap activity is occurring. It might also be slow on a
remote X server.
While I'm not really sure this is the actual bottleneck, caching the
atoms is easy enough and only needs a couple kb of memory, so do that.
On the added bench-x11:
Before: retrieved 2500 keymaps from X in 11.233237s
After : retrieved 2500 keymaps from X in 1.592339s
Signed-off-by: Ran Benita <ran@unusedvar.com>
Where resolve_keysym fails we warn but use the otherwise uninitialized variable
as our keysym. That later ends up in the keymap as random garbage hex value.
Simplest test case, set this in the 'us' keymap:
key <TLDE> { [ xyz ] };
And without this patch we get random garbage:
./build/xkbcli-compile-keymap --layout us | grep TLDE:
key <TLDE> { [ 0x018a5cf0 ] };
With this patch, we now get NoSymbol:
./build/xkbcli-compile-keymap --layout us | grep TLDE:
key <TLDE> { [ NoSymbol ] };
For me, installing pytest for libxkbcommon is a bit problematic, so I
end up skipping it which is not great.
Switch to unittest which is built in to Python. It's not as nice as
pytest but good enough in this case.
Note: I was too lazy to switch the plain asserts to unittest
assertions...
Signed-off-by: Ran Benita <ran@unusedvar.com>
MacOS doesn't have eaccess/euidaccess but it does have unistd.h, so let's
include it to silence the R_OK redefinition compiler warnings.
Signed-off-by: Peter Hutterer <peter.hutterer@who-t.net>
../src/context.c:57:9: warning: variable 'err' is used uninitialized whenever
'if' condition is true [-Wsometimes-uninitialized]
Signed-off-by: Peter Hutterer <peter.hutterer@who-t.net>
mkdtmp, rmdir and unlink are in unstd.h on MacOS. Since including that it
doesn't hurt us on Linux, let's do it without ifdefs.
Signed-off-by: Peter Hutterer <peter.hutterer@who-t.net>