Instead of setting the buffer scale via the buffer-scale command, set it
via the viewport.
This technically allows setting fractional scales, but we're not doing
that.
April fools!
No, really.
The fractional scale protocol is just a way to track the surface scale,
but not a way to draw fractional content.
This commit uses it for that, so tht we don't rely on tracking outputs.
This also allows magnifiers etc to send us a larger (integer) scale if
they would like that, that is not represented by the outputs.
Since Wayland 1.15, it is now possible to use absolute paths in
"WAYLAND_DISPLAY".
In that scenario, having a valid "XDG_RUNTIME_DIR" is not a requirement
anymore.
For this reason we remove the "XDG_RUNTIME_DIR" check and we let
`wl_display_connect()` decide if our environment is correct.
Signed-off-by: Ludovico de Nittis <ludovico.denittis@collabora.com>
The cursor-theme-size setting is documented as
'0 means the default size'. Make it so by using
size 24 if we see a 0. Its better than crashing.
Fixes: #5700
This is currently just used as a convenience storage of the startup ID
between the GtkApplication and the GtkWindow (after it's ready to notify
on it).
This could be untangled in the GTK layers so there is no involvement
from GDK in keeping the startup ID around, in the mean time just deprecate
these gdk_wayland* API calls.
By using wl_output_release(), GDK lets the compositor to clean up the
output global more nicely.
For example, currently, most compositors remove the global and then
destroy it later after N seconds expire. With this, the compositor could
experiment with destroying the output global once all its resources are
destroyed.
`apply_monitor_change()` already calls `update_scale()`.
Note that this only affects old compositor versions (see
`should_update_monitor()`) so it's just a minor cleanup.
Starting with the Wayland protocol wl_pointer >= 8, discrete axis
events have been deprecated in favour of high-resolution scroll event.
Add a listener for high-resolution scroll events and, for backwards
compatibility, handle discrete events as discrete*120.
The GdkToplevelSize struct already has the concept of "bounds", which
means the largest size a window should reasonably have. It's practically
the equivalent of the monitor the window is intended to be mapped on,
with the "struts" (e.g. panels) cut out. It's used by GTK to use this
information to calculate a default window size that is "lagom" (swedish;
not too large, not too small).
This makes the hotspot of DND surfaces work when using the Vulkan and
OpenGL renderers.
This bumps the CI image used to the newly built image. This is needed to
install a new enough libwayland-client.so needed for wl_surface.offset.
This is done by adding wayland as a meson subproject, building it
on-demand if the version in the system is not new enough. As
libwayland-client.so is pulled in implicitly when linking to gtk4, the
compile step needs LD_LIBRARY_PATH set to make ld find the right library
to link to.
We now have a boolean setting that determines whether the high-contrast
theme should be used. Support it by automatically setting the existing
`gtk-theme-name` and `gtk-icon-theme-name` properties when enabled.
With that, it is no longer necessary to change the regular theme settings
for high-contrast, so toggling between high-contrast and a non-default
theme finally works reliably.
Ping/pong serials are not meant to be interpreted as user input serials
(e.g. those given back later to the compositor on grabs). As a matter
of fact, Mutter uses a different count (i.e. timestamps) in these, so
using these serials may confuse the compositor into denying certain
operations like DnD.
Instead of
Display::make_gl_context_current()
we now have
GLContext::clear_current()
GLContext::make_current()
This fits better with the backends (we can actually implement
clearCurrent on macOS now) and makes it easier to implement different GL
backends for backends (like EGL/GLX on X11).
We also pass a surfaceless boolean to make_current() so the calling code
can decide if a surface needs to be bound or not, because the backends
were all doing whatever, which was very counterproductive.