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Words of wisdom
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1. Make sure all changed work on both KDE and Gnome
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2. The System tray protocol specification can be found at
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http://freedesktop.org/Standards/systemtray-spec/systemtray-spec-0.1.html
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3. The KDE System tray Docking Protocol can be found at
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http://developer.kde.org/documentation/library/kdetqt/kde3arch/protocols-docking.html
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4. The site i use for Xlib reference
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http://tronche.com/gui/x/xlib/function-index.html
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5. Qt Documentation at http://doc.trolltech.com
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6. There's do or no do. There's no try.
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TDEDocker Window Docking Strategy and a little bit of history
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-----------------------------------------------------------
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Couple of things that will help you if you are looking through the code.
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I wanted a single instance of TDEDocker to be running all the time. So,
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whenever a new instance of TDEDocker was created it would ask the previous
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instance take over.
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Two things to know about
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1. Mapping from the PID (process id) to WID (window id)
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2. How to let the previous instance know about app_to_launch
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Lets deal with them one by one.
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1. PID to WID mapping is easy if people followed rules. Just read _NET_WM_PID
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for a window. If it matches the one app's PID we just created, that window is
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the one we want to dock. Its not as simple as that. Programs have "splash"
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screens. A nice thing is that these "splash" screen have the _WM_TRANSIENT_FOR
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property set. So, we can skip those windows. There are these bunch of programs
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(like gaim, xmms) that create windows and dont put this property on them. Arrgh.
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What we do to counter these applications is to look for interesting windows
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possibly created by the process until the process dies. Have a look at the code
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for a better understanding.
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2. Sending ClientMessages to previous instances with the program name and
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arguments is painful and makes the code more complex. Before 1.0, I used to dump
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all the program arguments in ~/tdedocker.<pid> and send the pid in a
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ClientMessage. The file is then deleted after processing. As of 1.0, I set a
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property _KDOCKER_<pid> on the TDEDocker initial instance's window which holds
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the program arguments. (The correct way to transfer information is using
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XSelections)
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TRACING
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-------
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Add the following line in tdedocker.pro (in fact just uncomment it)
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DEFINES += ENABLE_TRACING
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Now do a "make clean" and "then make".
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Launch TDEDocker. Try recreating the problem.
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- Right Click on the tray icon.
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- Choose "About TDEDocker"
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- You should see a button called "Show Trace". Please note that this button
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will appear only when compiled with tracing
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- Try debugging yourself or send it to me
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- If you send SIGUSR1 to the TDEDocker process, it will dump all the trace to
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~/tdedocker.trace
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