When a toplevel is focused programmatically and there is no
underlying seat, we cannot attempt to focus it with no
focus to be obtained, nor serials serials to use.
Related: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gtk/-/issues/6335
In GLES, BGRA is still done by GL_EXT_texture_format_BGRA8888 which is
an extension that is older than GLES 2.0.
And back then, internal formats had to be specified unsized. And when
that was changed with GLES3, nobody updated the extension.
However, on OpenGL, this extension doesn't exist, and internal formats
need to be sized.
So let's use different internal formats depending on GL version.
Fixes#6333
Whether or not switches include shapes to indicate their ON/OFF
state is currently controlled by the stylesheet (in particular
the HighContrast style).
However there are use cases for both using the HighContrast style
without shapes, and for using shapes with the regular stylesheet,
so follow the newly added "show-status-shapes" setting instead.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gtk/-/issues/5354
For tablet tools if we have NULL cursor, we use the default cursor
instead. This provides us with a tablet cursor when an application never
sets the cursor.
However, on proximity out when we clear said cursor we also
need to toggle off cursor_is_default, otherwise on the next proximity in
we assume we already have a cursor and never update it again.
This leads to an invisible cursor over GTK application when the tablet
tool is brought into proximity over the widget (but not when moving into
the widget from the outside).
Closes: #6312
If shaders don't support nonuniform indexing, we emulate it via if/else
ladders (or switch ladders) which get inlined by the GLSL compiles and
massively blow up the code.
And that makes compilation of the shaders take minutes and results in
shader code that isn't necessarily faster.
So we disable it on GL entirely and on Vulkan if the required features
aren't available.
As it's only an optimization and does not fall back to Cairo anymore,
this should be fine.
gdk_texture_save_to_png_bytes() cannot fail, so ensure that it doesn't.
Testsuite has been updated to check for this case.
Note that we do not load the PNG file that we generate here.
Loading is a lot more scary than saving after all.
If people want to load oversized PNG files, they should use a real PNG
loader.
This is using the Vulkan renderer.
It also allows claiming support for all the formats that only Vulkan
supports, but that neither GL nor native mmap can handle.
I did it because it unifies the code.
But it also gains the benefit of being debuggable because it can
now be turned off via GDK_VULKAN_SKIP=incremental-present
This ensures both that we signal a semaphore for a dmabuf when we export
an image and that we import semaphores for dmabufs and wait on them.
Fixes Vulkan node-editor displaying the Vulkan renderer in the sidebar.
This code does not add a downloader, so we do not claim support for all
the new formats.
It just queries the formats. But this can be used to import dmabufs
directly into the Vulkaan renderer.
use it to collect the optional features we are interested in and turn
them on only if available.
For now we add the dmabuf features, but we don't use them yet.
According to EXT_color_buffer_half_float it should be renderable, but it
fails to glGenerateMipmap() with Mesa 23.3 so just pretend it's not
renderable until that is fixed.
Fixes CI from failing.
I naively assumed the EXT_color_buffer_float and
EXT_color_buffer_half_float extensions would mirror each other, but they
do not. The float extension explicitly excludes RGB32F from the
renderable formats.
Doing this in a way that is picked up by gobject-introspection
requires splitting off new enum members into separate doc
comments, which is a bit unfortunate.
Some dmabuf formats were added in Vulkan 1.3.
Note that this does not require the Vulkan drivers to be version 1.3 -
it just means compilation against libvulkan 1.3
This makes no sense by itself, but we want to create the EGLImage at
DmabufTexture construction so that we can actually reject dmabufs that
we can't create EGLImages for.
This will make it possible to bail when the stride limitation for AMD
GPUs hits.
Instead of having an add_formats() function, make the get_downloader()
function add the formats.
This allows putting the actual downloader in a different place from the
initialization code.
This is done without testing, just doing my best to map all the DRM
formats to VkFormats.
Once people start using them, they'll figure it out when it's wrong.
(Somebody needs to write a testsuite.)
When we use the builtin downloads via mmap(), it's a special case where
we don't need to initialize subsystems and query them for support. We
know what we can and can't do.
Also, we want to use these formats with the lowest priority but pick the
downloader first for supported formats, and queueing it in the
downloaders list doesn't reflect that. So don't do it.
Track fallback formats to use in the memoryformat directly instead of
using in the GL uploading code.
First of all, this allows sharing the code and ensuring all our
renderers use the same fallback mechanism.
But also, this allows tracking fallbacks per-format which is useful
because the fallback formats aren't really a tree. We want to make
FLOAT16 fall back to FLOAT32 when not available, but we also want
FLOAT32 fall back to FLOAT16.
By tracking the fallbacks per-format, we can achieve that.
Add gdk_memory_format_get_premultiplied() and
gdk_memory_format_get_straight() which return the matching
premultiplied/straight format.
Use this to pick the premultiplied format when uploading GL textures.
And remove the duplication in the dmabuf code, where we can now use
these functions instead of tracking both the premultiplied and straight
alpha versions.
Add an "RGBA" format that just maps to the swizzled version of the
default format.
This way, BGR gets mapped to RGB + swizzling first before trying to map
it to the default format for the depth.
The benefit here is that this format has the same memory width, so
uploading/downloading code can treat it equivalent to the original
format and there's no conversion neccessary later.
Now that we have gdk_gl_context_get_memory_flags() and code can use that
function, make the code do that.
Remove support checks from gdk_memory_format_gl_format().
This is an initial naive port that doesn't try to make use of the finer-grained
flags yet.
Checks which features of a given memory format are supported by
the current GL implementation.
We check:
* usable: Can be used as a texture with NEAREST filter
* renderable: Can be used as a render target
* filterable: Can be used with GL_LINEAR
In normal GL, all formats are all of these things, but GLES is a lot
more picky.
So far nobody uses this.
If a subsurface is not below, it is visible no matter what the opaque
region is.
Also, we don't need to care about transparency in the subsurface if we
ignore it anyway. So this is a win-win.
We accept transparent subsurfaces for passthrough now, when they are
above the surface.
But we did not unset the opaque region to empty when the texture is
transprent.
That way, we can work with older libdrm versions.
The list was generated via a bit of sed and grep from the current
dmabuf-fourcc.h, which is why I put it into its own file and included
all the formats, no matter how old they are.
Add the matching GdkMemoryFormat for all dmabuf formats.
This way, we don't fall back to RGBA8 for 10- and 16-bit formats that we
don't support natively when EGL or Vulkan use them.
Also includes corrections for a few mixups.