commit cf766763f2 was
messed up in more than one way. The biggest problem
was that It didn't include the Makefile changes needed
to ship the files added to the repository.
This commit fixes that.
This series of commits adds a few configuration files
to replace the kludgey symlink we use now for theme
specification.
In the future, these config files could potentially
be used for other things as well.
Now that the daemon looks for the default theme in configuration
files, we should make plymouth-set-default-theme write the
configuration files instead of doing symlinks.
That's what this commit does.
Right now we figure out the default theme via a symlink.
This apprach is very simple, but is also a little cumbersome.
It means as the default theme is changed around we have to move
the symlink around.
The symlink is in /usr. We really shouldn't be mucking with
/usr when changing defaults.
This commit checks the filesystem for two config files:
/usr/share/plymouth/plymouthd.defaults
and
/etc/plymouth/plymouthd.conf
The first one is for distributions to use. This is how they can
manage which splash to show from release to release.
The second one is for system administrators. This is how they
can override distribution policy.
We don't actually ship these files yet. In the mean time,
(and even after for the forseeable future) the old symlink method
will still work.
Previously the code was assuming the windows were placed at 0,0. This might not
be the case and the window X and Y values should be used when trying to
position items relative to a window.
This change needs to be applied to all other scripts otherwise mutiple screen
setups may have unaligned elements. Updates scripts should be tested using
multi-head test systems or the x11 test renderer.
Calls to Window.GetWidth/Height/X/Y without a window index now return the
values of the area covered by all windows. This is only the case if all the
windows are aligned (either by their centers, or to a corner).
This allows the theme designer to place an object knowing it will be seen on
all screens.
Minor bug, previously would return the index used rather than a NULL. Would
only cause problems when using a width request as a test of the presence of a
window.
When multiple screens are found, the system will now arrange them so they are
all centered, and the top left corner of the largest screen is at 0,0.
No changes to any scripts are needed.
If we're done with the VT plymouth was running on,
and plymouth wasn't running on the initial VT, we
should jump back to the initial VT and try to
clean up plymouth's VT.
Resetting the mode to text on every write means that if you're
using a text plugin and X starts, X's VT keeps getting reset back to
KD_TEXT since those plugins don't stop writing on deactivate (they
have no renderer).
There's no reason to set this mode here anyway; all paths to using
those plugins already do this.
Instead of setting the terminal to unbuffered (raw) mode on every
write, keep track of whether it's unbuffered or not at the points
we open and close the terminal.
Deactivate already takes care to set back into buffered mode;
otherwise we can end up resetting the terminal mode under X causing
Enter to send X SIGQUIT.
If we don't deactivate the renderer before hiding the splash, the
drm renderer may scan out the buffer contents to the fbcon buffer;
since we only hide the splash when dumping details or when
--retain-splash is *not* given to quit, this is exactly the
opposite of what we want.
The effect of not doing this is partial splash contents behind the
details in cases of error, or when using quit. This doesn't affect
plymouth quit --retain-splash.
One problem with the current deactivate/quit transition into X is that
the display manager will, if Plymouth was running, re-use the currently
active VT.
That only works if Plymouth was actually displaying a splash screen on
that VT. If --show-splash hasn't been called yet because we booted too
fast, we'll be on the wrong VT.
Add a request to ask whether the Plymouth VT is active; I've done it
this way so the answer defaults to "yes" for Fedora who use VT1.
The pseudo-code for transition is thus:
if plymouth is running (ping):
plymouth deactivate
if plymouth has active vt:
start X on current VT with -nr
if X starts ok:
plymouth quit --retain-splash
else if X fails:
plymouth quit
else if plymouth doesn't have active vt:
plymouth quit
start X as normal
else if plymouth isn't running:
start X as normal
Change the display_normal() function so that rather than being a no-op
if we already saved the state as normal, it restarts any animations and
redraws the views.
The only thing we now do if the state is not previously the same is
hide any prompt.
This allows this to be used to reanimate the plugin on reactivate.
Change the display_normal() function so that rather than being a no-op
if we already saved the state as normal, it restarts any animations and
redraws the views.
The only thing we now do if the state is not previously the same is
hide any prompt.
This allows this to be used to reanimate the plugin on reactivate.
Change the display_normal() function so that rather than being a no-op
if we already saved the state as normal, it restarts any animations and
redraws the views.
The only thing we now do if the state is not previously the same is
hide any prompt.
This allows this to be used to reanimate the plugin on reactivate.
Change the display_normal() function so that rather than being a no-op
if we already saved the state as normal, it restarts any animations and
redraws the views.
The only thing we now do if the state is not previously the same is
hide any prompt.
This allows this to be used to reanimate the plugin on reactivate.
Since deactivate uses on_boot_splash_idle, there's a good chance that
plugins will have stopped animating. Prod them to animate again by
calling update_display()
More for debugging and completeness than anything else, add a
"reactivate" command to the daemon that undoes the effects of
deactivate and continues the splash screen on its way.
Another possible use for this could be (for example) providing a
seamless shutdown experience.
A future commit will implement the client bits needed.
Currently deactivate is mostly like hide splash, except it deactivates
the renderer first and doesn't reset the VT to text mode and dump the
details plugin over top.
Unfortunately this means that the renderer is closed and freed, and in
the case of the Intel DRM renderer, closing the DRM file descriptor
means that the kernel frees the buffers and restores the fbcon buffer
on our screen - losing the smooth transition.
This now changes deactivate such that it leaves the boot splash open,
but in an inactivate state, with the DRM connection still open, etc.
now the fbcon contents are not restored.
We deliberately stop watching for keyboard input, detach any logging
session from the console, take the VT out of VT_PROCESS mode and
put it back into cooked mode, etc.
This means the X server can be started, and this state can be cleaned
up by calling plymouth quit with affecting X.
To allow deactivate_splash() to do more than affect the boot splash
plugin and renderer, call it from the deactivate path when there is
no boot splash screen as well.
In order to deactivate without pulling everything, we need to be able
to take the terminal in and out of VT_PROCESS mode directly; so change
the two functions from static to exported.
Since we ignore --show-splash, it makes no sense to process
--hide-splash either; in theory this does nothing already because
we won't have a boot_splash in our state - but that changes with
future patches and it's worth being safe.
The last thing we want to do after plymouth deactivate is called by
the X display manager is listen to calls to show the splash screen
again.
So don't.
When it comes to quitting, which must be carefully coordinated
with other subsystems during the boot process, we need to make
sure the client doesn't return early.
When it comes to deactivation where the various steps of boot
have to be carefully synchronized, we need to make sure that
the client doesn't return early.
Likewise if plymouth quit is called when we're waiting for the boot
splash to become idle, we also end up asserting that there's not
already an idle trigger.
Fix it in the same way as deactive, ignore the second quit command
except for pulling its trigger.
If plymouth deactivate is called when we're waiting for the boot
splash to become idle, we end up asserting that there's not
already an idle trigger.
Fix it by checking for an existing deactive trigger, and if there
is, ignoring the new deactivate command (except for pulling its
trigger so it doesn't block).
In the cases where the boot splash plugin does not become idle
immediately, we go back into the main loop and can receive additional
commands.
Since quit and deactive both use this facility, one scenario is the
quit command arriving after the deactivate command, but before the
deactivate command has actually been run.
In that situation, we want to quit, not deactivate.
One of the main differences between Ubuntu's use of Plymouth and
Fedora's is that on Ubuntu we've tried to keep the X server on VT7
so that the historical documentation of Ctrl-Alt-F1 giving you a
text console is preserved.
This obviously means that for a smooth transition, Plymouth must also
run on VT7.
We discovered that although Plymouth does have code to attempt to deal
with VTs, none of it is quite right and there are many paths that don't
work unless Plymouth is run on VT1.
This patch set fixes our known problems with the VT handling making it
possible to run Plymouth on any VT of your choosing, with VT1 remaining
the default.
Add a command-line option to specify the TTY that plymouth should
use. This is mostly useful for debugging, for example you can put
plymouth onto a TTY not used by the X server; or if you're feeling
particularly sneaky, plymouth into an xterm.