for class visibility on pointers to member function 'using the
qualifying scope of the name itself.' what this means is if method
'prot' is declared protected in class A and B inherits from A then
a method in B cannot use &A::prot but can use &B::prot. Synergy
now does this in the one place it had not.
keys are mapped to the same button. For example, the backslash
virtual key shares a button with some other virtual key on british
english key mappings. Synergy could end up using the wrong virtual
key. In the given case, the other virtual key produced no character
at all. To determine which virtual key should really be mapped to
a button we map the button back to a virtual key and see if it's the
virtual key we started with.
Also fixed mapping of pause key. Previously, windows+pause sent to
a win32 client wouldn't bring up system properties like it should.
detect synergy hotkeys but a design flaw in X11 makes it problematic
with many applications. We'll have to fall back to the more
traditional XGrabKey when the time comes.
that to the client. If it did then the user could see the effect of
ctrl+alt+del on both the server and client which we never want. The
user can use ctrl+alt+pause to emulate ctrl+alt+del on the client.
the X11 display connection. The only problematic method was
CXWindowsEventQueueBuffer::addEvent given that the other event queue
methods are only called from the main thread.
on a secondary screen when there's no physical mouse attached to
the system. Kinda flaky when a mouse is attached or detached but
seems to work well enough when the device is not attached to start
with and not attached while running synergy.
and on a secondary screen and locked to the screen (via scroll lock)
mouse motion is sent as motion deltas. When true and scroll lock
is toggled off the mouse is warped to the secondary screen's center
so the server knows where it is. This option is intended to support
games and other programs that repeatedly warp the mouse to the center
of the screen. This change adds general and X11 support but not
win32. The option name is "relativeMouseMoves".
multiple systems with automake, with X Windows and Carbon window
system APIs supported. It's also a starting port for supporting
win32 builds using mingw. OS X support is incomplete; the tree
will compile and link but the binaries will not function.
The low-level hook can report mouse positions outside the boundaries
of the screen and bogus retrograde motion. This messes up switch on
double tap. This change attempts to detect and suppress the bogus
events.
changed locking to screen so that keys no longer count (only
mouse buttons and scroll lock toggled on). This is to deal
with the unreliability of key event reporting which can leave
us locked to a screen with no key physically pressed. The
result of this is that clients get key repeats and releases
without the corresponding key press. CKeyState handles this
by discarding repeat/release events on keys it hasn't seen go
down. Also made a few other minor fixes to win32 keyboard
handling.
This new design is simpler. For keyboard support, clients need only
implement 4 virtual methods on a class derived from CKeyState and
one trivial method in the class derived from CPlatformScreen, which
is now the superclass of platform screens instead of IPlatformScreen.
Keyboard methods have been removed from IPlatformScreen, IPrimaryScreen
and ISecondaryScreen. Also, all keyboard state tracking is now in
exactly one place (the CKeyState subclass) rather than in CScreen,
the platform screen, and the key mapper. Still need to convert Win32.
on every key press and release so we don't have to updateKeys()
in isLockedToScreen(). However, if any key appears to be down
we still call updateKeys() to double check that it's really down.
If not we note the spurious lock and don't lock to the screen.
takes activation so the previously active window doesn't pop to
the top of the window stack when it regains activation. One
drawback of this is that the mouse cursor isn't shown when
a window (other than synergy's) is activated. However, synergy
does detect mouse motion as before and shows the cursor when it
sees any.
that allows you to power down the display. Previously, synergy
would not power on the display if DPMS was enabled and activated
and xscreensaver was not running. It also wouldn't disable DPMS
so the display would power down normally on a synergy client if
there was no input activity.