We might be dealing with GL contexts from different threads, which have more
gotchas when we are using libepoxy, so in case the function pointers for
these are invalidated by wglMakeCurrent() calls outside of GTK/GDK, such as
in GstGL, we want to use these functions that are directly linked to
opengl32.dll provided by the system/ICD, by linking to opengl32.lib.
This will ensure that we will indeed call the "correct" wgl* functions that
we need.
This should help fix issue #5685.
The old code used repeated calls to `ToUnicodeEx` to populate
the translation table, which is slow and buggy. The new code
directly loads the layout driver DLLs from Windows.
See https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gtk/-/merge_requests/4338
This commit attempts to split GdkWin32GLContext into two parts, one for
WGL and the other for EGL (ANGLE), and attempts to simplify things a
bit, by:
* We are already creating a Win32 window to capture display changes,
so we can just use that to act as our dummy window that we use to
find out the pixel format that the system supports for WGL. We also
use it to obtain the dummy legacy WGL context that we will always
require to create our more advanced Core WGL contexts.
* Like what is done in X11, store up the WGL pixel format or the
EGLConfig in our GdkWin32Display.
* Ensure we do not create the dummy WGL context unnecessarily.
In this way, we can successfully create the WGL/EGL contexts, however
there are some issues at this point:
* For WGL, the code successfully initializes and realizes the WGL
Contexts, but for some reason things became invisible. When running
gtk4-demo, this can be verified by seeing the mouse cursor changing
when moved to spots where one can resize the window, although they
were invisible.
* For EGL, the code initializes EGL but could not realize the EGL
context as shaders failed to compile. It seems like the shader issue
is definitely outside the scope of this MR.
...EGL support needs to be explicitly enabled during the build of
libepoxy on Windows as it is not enabled by default on Windows.
With this, we can add an EGL renderer for Windows that make use of
Google's libANGLE, which is a library that translates OpenGL/ES calls
to Direct3D 9/11, which will provide better hardware compatibility
on Windows and would act as one of the foundations to resolve issue #105.
We use a compilation symbol in our build to allow the inclusion of
specific headers while building GTK, to avoid the need to include only
the global header.
Each namespace has its own compilation symbol because we used to have
different libraries, and strict symbol visibility between libraries;
now that we have a single library, and we can use private symbols across
namespaces while building GTK, we should have a single compilation
symbol, and simplify the build rules.
ImmIsIME() doesn't work (always returns TRUE) since Vista.
Use ITfActiveLanguageProfileNotifySink to detect TSF changes,
which are equal to IME changes for us.
Also make sure that IMMultiContext re-loads the IM when keyboard layout
changes, otherwise there's a subtle bug that could happen:
* Run GTK application with non-IME layout (US, for example)
* Focus on an editable widget (GtkEntry, for example)
* IM Context is initialized to use the simple IM
* Switch to an IME layout (such as Korean)
* Start typing
* Since IME module is not loaded yet, keypresses are handled
by a default MS IME handler
* Once IME commits a character, GDK will get a WM_KEYDOWN,
which will trigger a GdkKeyEvent, which will be handled by
an event filter in IM Context, which will finally re-evaluate
its status and load IME, and only after that GTK will get
to handle IME by itself - but by that point input would
already be broken.
To avoid this we can emit a dummy event (with Void keyval),
which will cause IM Context to load the appropriate module
immediately.
This makes apps use "Segoe UI 9" by default instead of whatever matches "Sans 10".
It also cleans up the code and uses some new pango API while at it.
This was previously disabled in 9e686d1fb5 because it led to a poor glyph coverage
on certain versions of Windows which don't default to "Segoe UI 9" (Chinese, Korean, ..)
because the font fallback list was missing in pango.
This is about to get fixed in https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/pango/merge_requests/34
so enable it again when we detect a new enough pango version.
(See !436 for the original MR)
And make the GdkCairoContext as abstract.
The idea of this and thje following commits is to get rid of all
Cairo code in gdksurface.c (and $backend/gdksurface-$backend.c)
by moving that code into the Cairo context files.
In particular, the GdkSurfaceClass.begin_frame/end_frame()
functions (which are currently exclusively used by the Cairo code
should end up being moved to GdkDrawContextClass.begin/end_frame().
This has multiple benefits:
1. It unifies code between the different drawing contexts.
GL lives in GLContext, Vulkan in VulkanContext and Cairo in
CairoContext. In turn, this makes it way easier to reason about
what's going on in surface-specific code. Currently pretty much
all backends do things wrong when they want to sync to drawing
or to the frame clock.
2. It makes the API of GdkSurface smaller. No drawing code (apart
from creating the contexts) needs to remain.
3. It confines Cairo to the Drawcontext, thereby making it way
more obvious when backends are still using it in situations
where it may now conflict with OpenGL (like when doing the dnd
failed animation or in the APIs that I'm removing in this
branch).
4. We have 2 very different types of Cairo contexts: The X/win32
model, where we have a natively supported Cairo backend but do
double buffering ourselves and use similar surfaces and the
Wayland/Broadway model where we use image surfaces without any
Cairo backend support and have to submit the buffers manually.
By not sharing code between those 2 versions, we can make the
actual code way smaller. We also get around the need to create
1x1 image surfaces in the Wayland backend where we pretend
there's a native Cairo surface.
Rename GdkWin32Selection to GdkWin32Clipdrop, since GdkSelection
is mostly gone, and the word "selection" does not reflect the
functionality of this object too well.
Clipboard is now handled by a separate thread, most of the code for
it now lives in gdkclipdrop-win32.c, gdkclipboard-win32.c just uses
clipdrop as a backend.
The DnD source part is also put into a thread.
The DnD target part does not spin the main loop, it just
emits a GDK event and returns a default value if it doesn't get a reply
by the time the event is processed.
Both clipboard and DnD use a new GOutputStream subclass to get data
from GTK and put it into a HGLOBAL.
GdkWin32DragContext is split into GdkWin32DragContext and GdkWin32DropContext,
anticipating a similar change that slated to happen to GdkDragContext.
OLE2 DnD protocol is now used by default, set GDK_WIN32_OLE2_DND envvar to 0
to make GDK use the old LOCAL and DROPFILES protocols.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=773299
Rename all *window.[ch] source files.
This is an automatic operation, done by the following commands:
for i in $(git ls-files gdk | grep window); do
git mv $i $(echo $i | sed s/window/surface/);
git sed -f g $(basename $i) $(basename $i | sed s/window/surface/) ;
done
git checkout NEWS* po-properties po