The two files do exactly the same sort of things, without any discernible
reason for splitting them.
Signed-off-by: Ran Benita <ran234@gmail.com>
[daniels: Updated for xkb_desc -> xkb_keymap changes.]
The definitions in config.h should be available in all files an
implementation detail; it can be included through the build system
instead of having each file pull it every time.
This is especially helpful with AC_USE_SYSTEM_EXTENSIONS, as _GNU_SOURCE
and friends can have an effect by merely being defined, which can lead
to some confusion if its effective for only half the files.
And we don't really support a build _without_ config.h; so, one less
thing to worry about.
Signed-off-by: Ran Benita <ran234@gmail.com>
xkb_state_ref was missing.
Also modify the _ref functions to return the object instead of being
void. This is a useful idiom:
struct my_object my_object_new(struct xkb_state *state)
{
[...]
my_object->state = xkb_state_ref(state);
[...]
}
Essentially "taking" a reference, such that you don't forget to
increment it and it's one line less (see example in our own code).
A case could also be made for _unref to return the object or NULL, but
this is quite uncommon.
Signed-off-by: Ran Benita <ran234@gmail.com>
[daniels: Updated for xkb_keymap changes.]
i.e comparison of signed and unsigned values. These are mostly
harmless but fixing them allows to compile cleanly with -Wextra.
Signed-off-by: Ran Benita <ran234@gmail.com>
There are some cases where we must free a string with a const qualifier.
Add a macro UNCONSTIFY to trick the compiler into silencing the warning
in the cases where we know what we're doing.
Signed-off-by: Ran Benita <ran234@gmail.com>
And merge all the similar ones into the same name.
The u* prefix is chosen over the _Xkb prefix because it has more uses
throughout the codebase. But It should now be simple to choose a nice
prefix and stay consistent.
Signed-off-by: Ran Benita <ran234@gmail.com>
[daniels: fixed for the case where we have strcasecmp]
And use it consistently everywhere, including with a special long-safe
internal keycode type, to ease the transition to large keycodes.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Stone <daniel@fooishbar.org>
Use CARD32 instead of Atom/KeySym/et al to avoid type size confusion
between server and non-server code; relatedly, move the geometry headers
in from kbproto, so every non-simple type (i.e. structs containing
nothing more than basic types) is now copied into xkbcommon.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Stone <daniel@fooishbar.org>
On 64-bit architectures, XID varies in size between the server (always
32 bits), and non-server (always unsigned long) for some inexplicable
reason. Use CARD32 instead to avoid this horrible trap.
This involves dragging in XkbClientMapRec so we don't get stuck in the
KeySym trap.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Stone <daniel@fooishbar.org>
The noble intention was to expose all the new API and new generic types
in the split out kbproto headers through XKBcommon.h. It turns out that
would be a massive amount of work in the server. Someday, but first just
wedging in XkbCompileKeymap* would be good.
Most of the API is in new internal xkb*.h headers. In order to allow the
XKBcommon.h header to be used from the server, we can't pull in other
headers from kbproto since the server has its own copies. However, types
that are different (XkbDescRec, XkbAction) still have Xkbc equivalents
here, and I think they should be used in the server.
Added common variants of XkbComputeEffectiveMap, XkbInitCanonicalKeyTypes
and all their needed functions. A couple functions that were in alloc.c
moved to malloc.c to mirror the libX11 sources better.
Original code in
libX11/src/xkb/XKBMalloc.c
libX11/src/xkb/XKBMisc.c
libX11/src/xkb/XKB.c
Mostly tab-to-space conversion plus a few style nits. Dropped the
register keywords as I'm pretty sure modern compilers can be trusted to
do the right thing.
Following the kbproto convention, the headers will be named XKBcommon.h
and XKBcommonint.h. Furthermore, they'll be installed in X11/extensions
directory with the rest of the XKB headers.
Copies the code to initialize and destroy an XkbDescRec from libX11. The
original code is in
libX11/src/xkb/XKBAlloc.c
libX11/src/xkb/XKBGAlloc.c
libX11/src/xkb/XKBMAlloc.c