I was creating 2000 wiboxes in a loop (don't ask) and creating them took
forever. According to callgrind, there were about 2 million calls to
xcb_configure_window() and most (if not all) of them were from client_stack().
Awesome spent 70% of its cpu time in these client_stack() calls.
client_stack() is O(N^2) on the number of clients (it walks the list of clients
itself twice and each call to client_stack_above() walks the list too) and O(N)
on the number of wiboxes (it walks the wibox list twice). So obviously calls to
it should be rare.
This patch makes client_stack() only set a flag which is later checked. This
should reduce the number of restacks to the bare minimum. With this patch,
neither xcb_configure_window() nor anything else client_stack() related shows
up as having a lot of calls or using much cpu time.
Signed-off-by: Uli Schlachter <psychon@znc.in>
Signed-off-by: Julien Danjou <julien@danjou.info>
awesome_refresh() had a xcb_connection_t as first argument. Since there is
only one connection to the X server, this argument doesn't really have any
alternatives to globalconf.connection and thus makes no sense.
Signed-off-by: Uli Schlachter <psychon@znc.in>
Signed-off-by: Julien Danjou <julien@danjou.info>
The big change here is that we now keep our configuration structure in a global
variable called globalconf. This radically simplifies many interfaces, since
passing awesomeconf everywhere is no longer necessary. There are also more
subtle interface effects - now we can reliably identify a screen from just a
screen ID, rather than an awesomeconf, screenid tuple.
Overall, this patch makes most of the interfaces in awesome much nicer to use -
enjoy!
Yes, this is a huge patch, but since a lot of the refactoring was done
systematically using vim macros, splitting this up would have been very hard.