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@ -229,43 +229,50 @@ Understanding Wayland
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This part is supposed to also be simple: the core Wayland protocol will send us
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`wl_keyboard::keymap <TODO>`__, `wl_keyboard::key <TODO>`__ and
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`wl_keyboard::modifiers <TODO>`__ events containing the required data.
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`wl_keyboard::modifiers <TODO>`__ events containing the required data. To prove
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our hypotheses we can use ``wev`` which does very little post-processing as
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with ``xev``.
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The client does not seem to have a say in what kind of keymap it will get, it
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is up to the compositor. This means that even XWayland cannot say it wants raw
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data, but ``xkb_v1``-style keycodes are probably close.
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While exploring what happens I found a bug in ``wev`` (as of version 1.0.0-13
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in Arch): for wl_keyboard::modifiers the group is reported as the serial
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number::
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[14: wl_keyboard] key: serial: 238464; time: 554528472; key: 66; state: 1 (pressed)
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sym: Mode_switch (65406), utf8: ''
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[14: wl_keyboard] modifiers: serial: 1; group: 0
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depressed: 00000000
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latched: 00000000
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locked: 00000000
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Apparently I am `fixing <TODO>`__ more than one project :-)
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Note: Currently, SourceHut is down (TODO: remove this when sr.ht is up), so I
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cannot link you to my patch, so here it is instead::
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--- wev.c.orig 2024-01-13 22:38:03.739239211 +0100
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+++ wev.c 2024-01-13 22:38:08.012465335 +0100
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@@ -368,7 +368,7 @@
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uint32_t mods_locked, uint32_t group) {
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struct wev_state *state = data;
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int n = proxy_log(state, (struct wl_proxy *)wl_keyboard, "modifiers",
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- "serial: %d; group: %d\n", group);
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+ "serial: %d; group: %d\n", serial, group);
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if (n != 0) {
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printf(SPACER "depressed: %08X", mods_depressed);
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print_modifiers(state, mods_depressed);
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data, but ``xkb_v1``-style keycodes are probably close (they are off by 8,
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which is kind of expected).
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While exploring what happens I found out there is a bug in the stable version
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1.0.0 of ``wev``, where it forgets to include the serial number for
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wl_keyboard::modifiers. It has already `been patched
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<https://git.sr.ht/~sircmpwn/wev/commit/83de8e931ab04ce3322a58b359d8effa7901b21c>`__
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15 months ago, but the patch is not included in a release yet.
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But I am also interested in what is exchanged between the compositor and
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XWayland server. And there does not seem to be any kind of sniffer yet, so `I
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started writing one <https://gitea.ledoian.cz/LEdoian/sopass/>`__
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[#wiresharkify]_. Only then I learned that I can set the environment variable
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``WAYLAND_DEBUG=1`` to get dumps of all the calls that are happening. (To my
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defense, this does not seem to be very documented. I only found a small note in
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the `building guide <TODO>`__. Even the `debugging extras page <TODO>`__ does
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not mention this.)
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.. should fix the wl docs instead of ranting, though…
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By running ``WAYLAND_DEBUG=1 Xwayland :15`` and ``DISPLAY=:15 xev``, we do
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learn what we thought was happening:
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- XWayland gets XKB v1 keymap (I trust sway to supply the same map as to
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``wev`` earlier.)
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- XWayland gets the correct (Wayland core) events from the compositor
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- XWayland sends a wrong (X11 with XKB) events to ``xev``.
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This confirms that XWayland is really the culprit here.
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Digging into XWayland
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=====================
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At this point, we have all the tools, references to documentation and knowledge
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we could possibly have, so now we get our hands dirty. A simple ``grep -r
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wl_keyboard src/`` tells us that the keyboard handling occurs in the file
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``hw/xwayland/xwayland-input.c`` in functions ``keyboard_handle_*``, which look
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like the libwayland-client handlers we have seen in ``wev``.
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.. TO-MENTION:
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- nested compositor issues
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@ -274,3 +281,10 @@ started writing one <https://gitea.ledoian.cz/LEdoian/sopass/>`__
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- list of all the packages I had downloaded and compiled
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.. TODO: rename XWayland to Xwayland…
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---------
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.. [#wiresharkify] It would be nice if we could analyse the traffic in a
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general packet analysis program like Wireshark, though, so I might return to
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sopass and write the dissectors and dumping from sopass to a pcap file in a
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future. However, this gets put on hold now.
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