These two functions were added in 9ff1859dc1
for Windows, but were never used on Linux.
Adding stubs will allow the host to compile on Linux.
These should be fixed later.
The prototype for abs is int abs (int n), which implicitly casts floating
point values to integers. The correct function is fabs.
This commit allows the client to compile under clang.
gcc -Wimplicit-fallthrough only detects comments if they are immediately
preceded before the next label. Braces stops it from recognizing the
fallthrough comment.
-Wno-sign-compare is used to suppress warnings related to comparing signed
values with unsigned ones. It's too pedantic.
-Wunused-parameter is also too pedantic, especially since all parameters
have to be named in C.
Otherwise, -Wextra lets us catch bugs, such as x < 0 for unsigned x.
On gcc, we pass -Wimplicit-fallthrough=2 so it will recognize our fall
through comment.
This makes it a compile-time error to call a function that semantically
takes no parameters with a nonzero number of arguments.
Previously, such code would still compile, but risk blowing up the stack
if a compiler chose to use something other than caller-cleanup calling
conventions.
Copying rich text from the guest would be turned into plaintext on the client.
Prior to this change, this would be sent back to the guest, overwriting its
clipboard. This made it impossible to copy rich text inside the guest.
This commit detects such self-copies by checking if the receiver is the
current process, and rejecting it.
This prevents looking-glass-client from failing with an error message like:
error marshalling arguments for receive (signature sh): null value passed for arg 0
Error marshalling request: Invalid argument
When input:grabKeyboardOnFocus is set (default), entering capture mode grabs
the keyboard a second time. This commit makes the second grab a no-op on
Wayland to avoid a crash.
Previously, main.c would segfault at runtime if clipboards were disabled
via cmake flags, as the clipboards array would be empty but still
indexed during initialization.
Co-authored-by: Quantum <quantum2048@gmail.com>
Otherwise, a badly-behaving client causes Looking Glass to receive a
SIGPIPE during Wayland copy operations. Handle EPIPE at call-sites
instead.
Co-authored-by: Quantum <quantum2048@gmail.com>
The normal logic does not work due to Wayland not supporting mouse warp.
We use a simple logic that works for the desktop with 1:1 mouse patch and
require capture mode for all other cases.