With some layouts, this broke uppercase letters in your passwords.
I think that explicit shiftlock handling is unnecessary. X11 seems to do
it on its own. Here is what leads me to that conclusion:
$ setxkbmap de
$ xmodmap -e 'keycode 66 = Shift_Lock'
$ xev
Now enter a character, say "a", then press CapsLk (which is now
Shift_Lock), then press "a" again. The event state is 0x1, thereby
undistinguishable from normal shift.
The Debian packaging is now hosted on Debian servers at
git://git.debian.org/users/stapelberg/i3lock.git
This makes life easier for Debian people. It makes life harder
for you if you want to build a Debian package of the current
git version. Here is how you could do that now:
Build a tarball of the current git version:
mkdir ../i3lock-dpkg
VERSION=i3lock-$(git describe --tags)
git archive --prefix=$VERSION/ --output=../i3lock-dpkg/$VERSION.tar.bz2 HEAD
get the packaging:
cd ../i3lock-dpkg
gbp-clone git://git.debian.org/users/stapelberg/i3lock.git
cd i3lock
git-import-orig ../$VERSION.tar.bz2
dpkg-buildpackage
See also:
http://article.gmane.org/gmane.linux.kernel/1268792
The C compiler will handle (void) as "no arguments" and () as "variadic
function" (equivalent to (...)) which might lead to subtle errors, such
as the one which was fixed with commit 0ea64ae4.
If the specified file does not exist or is invalid, previously, the unlock
indicator wouldn’t show up at all, because the invalid surface was still used.
With this commit, i3lock will react like if you didn’t specify an image at all.
I tested this with the following experiment:
$ setxkbmap 'us(intl)'
$ xmodmap ~/configfiles/midna/Xmodmap
$ xmodmap -e 'keycode 38 = a A adiaeresis Adiaeresis o O'
$ xmodmap -e 'keycode 49 = ISO_Level3_Shift ISO_Level3_Shift ISO_Level3_Shift ISO_Level3_Shift'
Then, Mode_switch + a yields ä, but ` + a yields o.
In i3lock, these were swapped (Mode_switch + a yielded o, while ä was not
reachable at all). The comment in the code explains it
(See http://code.stapelberg.de/git/configfiles for the Xmodmap)
This fixes bug http://bugs.i3wm.org/545, where characters (of your password)
would rarely slip through when entering your password (especially) after
resuming your notebook from suspend to RAM.
The reason is that when resuming, X triggers one or more MappingNotify events.
At the same time, CPU load is high. This leads to a race-condition between the
ungrab and re-grab in which i3lock temporarily does not grab the keyboard.
One way to fix this is using xcb_grab_server() before and xcb_ungrab_server()
after the ungrab/re-grab. However, I think we actually don’t need to
ungrab/re-grab at all. I seem to have put that code in here by mistake – in i3,
we re-grab after MappingNotify, but there we only grab specific keys. In
i3lock, we grab the whole pointer/keyboard, so there should be no need.
If I’m incorrect and this breaks some subtle use-cases for people with strange
layout setup, at least we can properly document on why we need it, after we put
it back in ;).