- The 'update_status_from_message()' function now properly parses all
changed properties, instead of only the first one.
- Implemented support for the 'Seekd' signal
- Added support for signals and therefore the ability to listen
for updates to the internal state, without having to query it
manually every update cycle
- The entire implementation recieved various changes all across the
codebase.
Wlan interfaces apparently report themselves as ARPHRD_ETHER in their
ifinfomsg struct (despite there being a ARPHRD_IEEE80211 type...).
"Fix" by hardcoding the type to "wlan" when we receive a
NL80211_CMD_NEW_INTERFACE message.
The tag maps to the IFLA_INFO_KIND (part of the IFLA_LINKINFO)
netlink attribute.
This attribute is only available on virtual interfaces. Examples of
valid values are:
* bond
* bridge
* gre
* tun
* veth
This tag maps to the ifinfomsg->ifi_type member, which is set to one
of the ARPHRD_xyz values, defined in linux/if_arp.h.
There's a *ton* of them, and we can't possibly add a string mapping
for _all_ of them, so for now, set to one of:
* loopback
* ether
* wlan
* ARPHRD_NNN, where N is a number
When we're not able to use inotify, we rely on polling. However, we
never detected poll() timeouts, which meant we never re-attempted to
reconnect to MPD.
Maybe #394
This commit adds the ability to display status information for MPRIS
compatible music players.
I've adapted most of the naming conventions (and some code) from the
MPD module.
sway moves the workspace to fallback_output when there is no output. For example: when all the screens are off. This commit adds an ignore for the fallback output.
If the amount of data coming in is more than we can hold in our
buffer, we resized the buffer by doubling its size. However, there
were two(!) issues here:
* If this was the first resize, the buffer size was set to 1024. This
may not be enough (i.e. there may be more than 1024 bytes to process).
* In all other cases, the buffer size was doubled. However, there is
still no guarantee the buffer is large enough.
Fix by looping until the buffer *is* large enough.