225 lines
8.1 KiB
Haskell
225 lines
8.1 KiB
Haskell
{-# LANGUAGE DeriveFunctor #-}
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{-# LANGUAGE GeneralizedNewtypeDeriving #-}
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--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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-- | Xcape MANager (XMan) - a wrapper for managing xcape
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--
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-- xcape is a program to map keyrelease events to keysyms, and is very useful
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-- for making custom keymaps. However, it is not always desirable to have this
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-- running all the time; for example, VirtualBox will blend the xkb keymap with
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-- that if the Guest OS, so xcape may end up producing an extra keypress. The
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-- solution is to turn off xcape when certain windows are in focus.
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--
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-- The process for doing this using Xlib:
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-- 1) Listen for PropertyNotify events from the root window
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-- 2) Of those events, filter those where the _NET_ACTIVE_WINDOW atom has changed
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-- 3) Using the value of _NET_ACTIVE_WINDOW, get the app name of the active window
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-- 4) If the app name matches a certain criteria, turn off xcape (vice versa)
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--
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-- The matching criteria in (4) are POSIX regular expressions.
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--
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-- Known limitations:
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-- this is agnostic to any keymap changes, so if the keymap is changed, xcape
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-- will not be updated or restarted. Furthermore, it is outside the scope of
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-- this program to bind multiple xcape mappings with multiple keymaps
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module Main where
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import Control.Monad (forM_, forever, void, when)
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import Control.Monad.Reader
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import Control.Monad.State
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import Data.List (any)
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import Data.Maybe (isJust)
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import Graphics.X11.Types
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import Graphics.X11.Xlib.Atom
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import Graphics.X11.Xlib.Display
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import Graphics.X11.Xlib.Event
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import Graphics.X11.Xlib.Extras
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import Graphics.X11.Xlib.Misc
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import Graphics.X11.Xlib.Types
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import Text.Regex.TDFA
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import System.Environment
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import System.Posix.IO
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import System.Posix.Signals
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import System.Process
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--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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-- | Central State+Reader+IO Monad (I wonder where this idea came from...)
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--
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-- The Reader portion holds some of the key data structures from X that we care
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-- about as well as the regular expression patterns to match the app names we
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-- care about and and the bindings to pass to the xcape command.
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--
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-- The State portion holds the xcape process handle (so we can kill it later)
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newtype XMan a = XMan (ReaderT XMConf (StateT XMState IO) a) deriving
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(Functor, Monad, MonadIO, MonadState XMState, MonadReader XMConf)
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instance Applicative XMan where
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pure = return
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(<*>) = ap
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newtype XMState = XMState { xcapeHandle :: Maybe ProcessHandle }
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data XMConf = XMConf
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{ display :: Display
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, theRoot :: Window
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, netActiveWindow :: Atom
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, regexps :: Patterns
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, xcapeProcess :: CreateProcess
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}
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-- | timeout for xcape
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type Timeout = Maybe String
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-- | bindings for xcape
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type Bindings = String
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-- | regular expression patterns
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type Patterns = [String]
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-- | window app name
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type AppName = String
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--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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main :: IO ()
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main = getArgs >>= parse
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-- | Given a list of arguments, either start the program or print the usage
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parse :: [String] -> IO ()
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parse [_] = usage
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parse ("-t":t:b:rs) = initXMan rs $ mkXcapeProcess (Just t) b
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parse (b:rs) = initXMan rs $ mkXcapeProcess Nothing b
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parse _ = usage
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-- | Given a timeout and bindings for xcape, return a process record. This will
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-- run xcape in debug mode (which will make it run as a foreground process,
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-- otherwise it will fork unnecessarily).
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mkXcapeProcess :: Timeout -> Bindings -> CreateProcess
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mkXcapeProcess (Just t) b = proc "xcape" $ ["-t", t, "-d", "-e"] ++ [b]
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mkXcapeProcess Nothing b = proc "xcape" $ ["-d", "-e"] ++ [b]
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-- | Print the usage and exit
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usage :: IO ()
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usage = putStrLn "xman [-t TIMEOUT] BINDINGS REGEXP [[REGEXP] ...]"
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-- | Given xcape bindings and regular expression patterns to match the window
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-- titles we care about, initialize the XMan monad and run the main event loop
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initXMan :: Patterns -> CreateProcess -> IO ()
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initXMan rs cp = do
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-- ignore SIGCHLD so we don't produce zombie processes
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void $ installHandler sigCHLD Ignore Nothing
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dpy <- openDisplay ""
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root <- rootWindow dpy $ defaultScreen dpy
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naw <- internAtom dpy "_NET_ACTIVE_WINDOW" False
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let cf = XMConf
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{ display = dpy
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, theRoot = root
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, netActiveWindow = naw
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, regexps = rs
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, xcapeProcess = cp
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}
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st = XMState { xcapeHandle = Nothing }
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-- listen only for PropertyNotify events on the root window
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allocaSetWindowAttributes $ \a -> do
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set_event_mask a propertyChangeMask
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changeWindowAttributes dpy root cWEventMask a
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void $ allocaXEvent $ \e ->
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runXMan cf st $ do
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updateXCape -- set the initial state before entering main loop
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forever $ handle =<< io (nextEvent dpy e >> getEvent e)
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-- | Lift an IO monad into the XMan context
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io :: MonadIO m => IO a -> m a
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io = liftIO
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-- | Given an initial state and configuration, run the XMan monad
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runXMan :: XMConf -> XMState -> XMan a -> IO (a, XMState)
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runXMan c s (XMan a) = runStateT (runReaderT a c) s
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-- | Update the xcape status given the state of XMan
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updateXCape :: XMan ()
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updateXCape = do
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dpy <- asks display
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atom <- asks netActiveWindow
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root <- asks theRoot
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prop <- io $ getWindowProperty32 dpy atom root
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case prop of
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Just [aw] -> getAppName (fromIntegral aw) >>= startOrKillXCape
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_ -> return ()
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-- | Given an event, call a handler. In this case the only thing we care about
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-- are PropertyNotify events where the atom is _NET_ACTIVE_WINDOW, which will
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-- initiated the xcape update logic.
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handle :: Event -> XMan ()
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handle PropertyEvent { ev_atom = a } = do
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atom <- asks netActiveWindow
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when (a == atom) updateXCape
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handle _ = return ()
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-- | Given a window, return its app name
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getAppName :: Window -> XMan AppName
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getAppName w = asks display >>= io . fmap resName . flip getClassHint w
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-- | Given an IO action (which is assumed to call an XLib function that may
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-- throw an error), attach an error handler before performing the action and
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-- remove it after it completes. The error handler will ignore BadWindow errors
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-- (which in this case are assumed to be benign since the _NET_ACTIVE_WINDOW
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-- atom may refer to a non-existent window)
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permitBadWindow :: IO a -> IO a
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permitBadWindow action = do
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handler <- mkXErrorHandler $ \_ e ->
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getErrorEvent e >>= handleError >> return 0
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original <- _xSetErrorHandler handler
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res <- action
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void $ _xSetErrorHandler original
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return res
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where
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-- TODO also ignore badvalue errors?
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handleError ErrorEvent { ev_error_code = t }
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| fromIntegral t == badWindow = return ()
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handleError _ = print "actual error"
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-- | Given an app name, start or stop xcape if it matches any of the supplied
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-- regular expressions in XMan
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startOrKillXCape :: AppName -> XMan ()
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startOrKillXCape name = do
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rs <- asks regexps
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if any (name =~) rs then stopXCape else startXCape
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-- | Start xcape if it is not already running
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startXCape :: XMan ()
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startXCape = do
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pID <- gets xcapeHandle
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unless (isJust pID) $ do
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cp <- asks xcapeProcess
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h <- io $ createProcessNull cp
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modify $ \s -> s { xcapeHandle = Just h }
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io $ print "started xcape"
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-- | Stop xcape if it is running
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stopXCape :: XMan ()
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stopXCape = do
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pID <- gets xcapeHandle
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forM_ pID $ \p -> do
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io $ terminateProcess p
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modify $ \s -> s { xcapeHandle = Nothing }
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io $ print "stopped xcape"
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-- | Given a createProcess record, start the process with stderr and stdout
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-- redirected to the null device
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-- NOTE: use the process module here rather than the unix module. The latter has
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-- the 'forkProcess' function which may fail if multiple instances of xcape are
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-- started and killed in quick succession (Resource unavailable error).
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createProcessNull :: CreateProcess -> IO ProcessHandle
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createProcessNull cp = do
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fd <- openFd "/dev/null" ReadOnly Nothing defaultFileFlags
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dn <- UseHandle <$> fdToHandle fd
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(_, _, _, h) <- createProcess $ cp { std_err = dn, std_out = dn }
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return h
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