The plugin should always be loaded, as:
- we can provide a virtual display over VNC, even if the device isn't capable to use virtual displays itself (`krfb-virtualmonitor`)
- we would do the capabilities check regardless, if !670 gets merged
- hiding the DBus path doesn't trigger the `PluginChecker.qml` to think the plugin is unavailable, it just doesn't work
- -> is this a bug or intended behaviour?
BUG: 485829
## Summary
Currently, the plugin just fails silently if the local device is missing the `krfb` package or if the remote device misses an `vnc://` protocol/scheme handler. You click the button and nothing happens.
One issue is, that the plugin is considered `virtualmonitor.available` in the `DeviceDelegate.qml`, even if the check for `krfb-virtualmonitor` fails and no dbus-path is provided. I investigated the behavior a bit, but ignored it in the end as this MR benefits from being shown for device constellations that _could_ provide this feature.
A warning is shown with brief instructions, how to get the plugin working correctly.
- Check if krfb-virtualmonitor is available locally
- Check default scheme handler for vnc:// on device (Linux)
- Show warnings / reasons, if no connection could be established
## Test Plan
Regarding if the devices have mentioned packages installed, we should see different behaviors.
If the remote device has no VNC client, it can not connect to out server. _A warning should be shown._
If the local device hasn't the `krfb-virtualmonitor` available, the remote device couldn't connect. _A warning should be shown._
If both problems are present, _both warnings should be shown._
If none of these are present, no warning should be shown and we should try to establish a connection.
The connection attempts failed? _A warning should be shown._
BUG: 485830
The current implementation of the plugin is severly broken.
1. The generated URL links to the localhost
2. The port is not set
-----
The URL is now generated on the request receiving side, not send in the request.
This allows finding a valid IP address.
Furthermore, I changed the protocol by splitting it up. This could become useful, if we ever want to support other rdp protocols/platforms.
Note: This is a breaking change, but the current implementation is not working at all.. so it does not actually break something.
This is far less code and allows for an easier enforcing of standards, for
example the name of the log identifiers which were adjusted in a few cases.
Also clean up unused includes when noticed.
Those plugins re really simple and don't need any initialization logic.
With the using statement, we do not need to add a constructor and pass the parent/args to the baseclass
- We do not need the return type. If a plugin declares it can handle the
packet it should do so. We don't have any fallback logic in place and
the packet types are namespaced with the plugin IDs anyway.
- Provide a default implementation with a warning, not all plugins need
to overwrite this
The rationale is explained in https://planet.kde.org/friedrich-kossebau-2023-06-28-include-also-moc-files-of-headers/
In case of KDEConnect, it impressively speeds up compilation. Before it
took 390 seconds on a clean build and with this change it took 330 seconds.
This is due to the mocs_compilation having to include the header files
and thus all their headers. Due to the lots of small plugins we have,
this means that the same headers must be compiled plenty of times.
When we include the moc files directly in the C++ file, they are already
available.
This makes it easier to read, because we do not have to handle a list of
files that get added to the targets. In other KDE projects, we also
prefer the target centric approach.
In case one wants to reuse the same category in multiple places, it
would be best to create a small static lib. But for now, this is not
needed.
The one derived from the filename is identical. Deriving it from the filename is the preferred approach.
In KF6, log messages are printed out if the Id is needlessly specified.
A mismatching Id vs basename would print out a warning.
The plugin version doesn't matter, because all plugins are shipped as
part of kdeconnect and not separately.
The website was also set inconsistently, some pointed to a custom blog,
the KDE homepage or a broken link. If we want to make announcements more
visible, we should have a link in a more central place.