This basically neuters gdk_window_move_region, gdk_window_scroll
and gdk_window_move_resize, in that they now never copy any bits but
just invalidate the source and destination regions. This is a performance
loss, but the hope is that the simplifications it later allows will let
us recover this performance loss (which mainly affects scrolling).
Turns out our blurring function isn't very nice, it has a lot
of energy past the blur radius, so clipping at exactly the
blur radius causes ugly gradient stops. This just adds 4
extra pixels of slop, which makes this better in most cases.
We split up the rendering of blurred shadows into 9 parts, the
corners, the sides and the rest. This lets us only blur the "blurry"
part, and it lets us completely skip blurry parts that are fully
clipped.
As per css3-background 7.2. Drop Shadows: the ‘box-shadow’ property:
An outer box-shadow casts a shadow as if the border-box of the element
were opaque. The shadow is drawn outside the border edge only: it
is clipped inside the border-box of the element.
Also verified vs firefox behaviour.
Change the visibility handling to be the same way we do it in
GLib now. We pass -fvisibility=hidden to gcc and decorate public
functions with __attribute__((visibility("default"))).
This commit just does this for GDK, GTK+ will follow later.
glib-mkenums is not currently clever enough to know which version an
enum type was added in, so just mark all the _get_type() functions as
available in all versions.
Make all GDK_DEPRECATED and GDK_AVAILABLE macros use a
new _GDK_EXTERN macro. _GDK_EXTERN defaults to just 'extern'
but a subsequent commit will add visibility handling to it
while building GTK+.
glib-mkenums is not currently clever enough to know which version an
enum type was added in, so just mark all the _get_type() functions as
available in all versions.
Add a macro to declare that a particular symbol is available in all
versions of GTK+.
All newly-added symbols should have proper version macros (like
GDK_AVAILABLE_IN_3_4).
This avoids an evil trap when doing MAX (..., ... - 2 * border_width)
and the expression on the right gets promoted to unsigned, instead
of going negative as you would expect.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=699633
These tests check that a toplevel window ends up with the expected
size after setting default sizes or resizing. It currently passes
on X, but fails with client-side decorations under X and Wayland.
When we call _gdk_wayland_display_load_cursor_theme during
the initial opening of the first display, gdk_setting_get does
not work yet, since it relies on the default display/screen
being set, which only happens after open returns.
Instead, just use the screen of this display.