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
It started out as busywork, but it does many separate things. If I could
start over, I'd take them apart into multiple commits:
1. Remove G_ENABLE_DEBUG around GDK_DEBUG_*() calls
This is not needed at all, the calls themselves take care of it.
2. Remove G_ENABLE_DEBUG around profiling code
This now enables profiling support in release builds.
3. Stop poking _gdk_debug_flags and use GDK_DEBUG_CHECK()
This was old code that was never updated.
4. Make !G_ENABLE_DEBUG turn off GDK_DEBUG_CHECK()
The code used to
#define GDK_DEBUG_CHECK(...) false
#define GDK_DEBUG(...)
which would compile away all the code inside those macros. This
means a lot of variable definitions and debug utility functions
would suddenly no longer be used and cause compiler errors.
We need to inist on the nonuniform access beuing available and that
requires Vulkan 1.2.
Also simplifies the descriptor indexing stuff, because that's all part
of Vulkan 1.2, too.
Have a resource path => vkShaderModule hash table instead of doing fancy
custom objects.
A benefit is that shader modules are now shared between all renderers
and pipelines.
Wait for device to be idle because this function is also called in
window resizes.
And if we destroy old swapchain it also destroy the old VkImages,
those images could be in use by a vulkan render.
This fixes a issue reported in Mesa repository when running
GTK with Xe KMD.
Fixes: https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/mesa/mesa/-/issues/9044
Signed-off-by: José Roberto de Souza <jose.souza@intel.com>
Make the display handle the cache, because we only need one.
We store the cache in
$CACHE_DIR/gtk-4.0/vulkan-pipeline-cache/$UUID.$VERSION
so we regenerate caches for each different device (different UUID) and
each different driver version.
We also keep track of the etag of the cache file, so if 2 different
applications update the cache, we can detect that.
Vulkan allows merging caches, so the 2nd app reloads the new cache file
and merges it into its cache before saving.
It's necessary now that we use storage buffers for gradients:
[ VUID-VkDescriptorSetLayoutBindingFlagsCreateInfo-descriptorBindingStorageBufferUpdateAfterBind-03008 ] Object 0: handle = 0x1e72d70, type = VK_OBJECT_TYPE_DEVICE; | MessageID = 0x943cc552 | vkCreateDescriptorSetLayout(): pBindings[0] can't have VK_DESCRIPTOR_BINDING_UPDATE_AFTER_BIND_BIT for VK_DESCRIPTOR_TYPE_STORAGE_BUFFER since descriptorBindingStorageBufferUpdateAfterBind is not enabled. The Vulkan spec states: If VkPhysicalDeviceDescriptorIndexingFeatures::descriptorBindingStorageBufferUpdateAfterBind is not enabled, all bindings with descriptor type VK_DESCRIPTOR_TYPE_STORAGE_BUFFER must not use VK_DESCRIPTOR_BINDING_UPDATE_AFTER_BIND_BIT (https://www.khronos.org/registry/vulkan/specs/1.3-extensions/html/vkspec.html#VUID-VkDescriptorSetLayoutBindingFlagsCreateInfo-descriptorBindingStorageBufferUpdateAfterBind-03008)
Pretty much copy what GL does and just use the default display to create
GPU-related resources without the need for a display.
This also adds gdk_display_create_vulkan_context() but I've
kept it private because the Vulkan API is generally considered in flux,
in particular with our pending attempts to redo how renderers work.
Instead of having a descriptor set per operation, we just have one
descriptor set and bind all our images into it.
Then the shaders get to use an index into the large texture array
instead.
Getting this to work - because it's a Vulkan extension that needs to be
manually enabled, even though it's officially part of Vulkan 1.2 - is
insane.
Check if the driver supports MAILBOX and prefer using it; in its
absense, checkif the driver supports IMMEDIATE and prefer using
it; finally, if neither of them are supported, use the guaranteed
to be supported FIFO mode.
Basically what GL does, but without any debug or feature flag
to gatekeep it, since the Vulkan backend itself is experimental
already.
Ceil surface sizes, and floor coordinates, to the fractional scale
value.
The Lunarg validation layers seem to have been deprecated in favour
of the Khronos ones. There's no reason not to have both, to accept
loading both - simultaneously, even.
Instead of passing a single, potentially massive rectangle that is
just the extents of the damage rect, collect and pass all damage
rects individually.
The term "hdr" is so overloaded, we shouldn't use them anywhere, except
from maybe describing all of this work in blog posts and other marketing
materials.
So do renames:
* hdr => high_depth
* request_hdr => prefers_high_depth
This more accurately describes what is going on.
We end up with a surface that has size 0x0 at the
time we create the Vulkan context, and that is a
size that Vulkan doesn't like, so ensure we request
at least 1x1.
Fixes: #3147
Conditionally check whether the Vulkan headers version defines
VK_RESULT_RANGE_SIZE, and avoid using it for version >=140. The
following comming in Vulkan-Headers has removed the enum value:
0c5351f5e9 (diff-4febd94c0666d59030d8b1dd20c72403)
This is the Vulkan version of eglSwapBuffersWithDamage(), and
it's always a good idea to limit the number of pixels we're
pushing to the GPU and/or swapping into the display.
If we set c_marshaller manually, then g_signal_newv() will not setup a
va_marshaller for us. However, if we provide c_marshaller as NULL, it will
setup both the c_marshaller (to g_cclosure_marshal_VOID__VOID) and
va_marshaller (to g_cclosure_marshal_VOID__VOIDv) for us.
Some of the flags got lost in the meson transition or were demoted from
error flags to warning flags.
This commit reintroduces them.
It also includes fixes for the code that had warnings with those flags.
The big one being -Wshadow.
We used to pass 2 regions to GdkDrawCotnext.end_frame() but code was
confusing what they meant. So we now don't do that anymore and only pass
the region that matters: The frame region.
This makes the previous gdk_draw_context_is_drawing() function public
under a new name.
I decided against the old name because we use the term "frame" for a
drawing operation, so I wanted to have this boolean flag reuse the term.
As they require a draw context and the draw context is already bound to
the surface, it makes much more sense and reduces abiguity by moving
these APIs to the draw context.
As a side effect, we simplify GdkSurface APIs to a point where
GdkSurface now does not concern itself with drawing anymore at all,
apart from being the object that creates draw contexts.
With the previous approach we would spend most of the time waiting for
the swapchain to be filled again because it seems the compositor takes
care of 2 images at once from time to time.
This is not visible in profiles because waiting for a frame is a
read/poll/whatever operation that does not take CPU. It's only
noticeable because the app becomes less responsive.
This is an automatic rename of various things related
to the window->surface rename.
Public symbols changed by this is:
GDK_MODE_WINDOW
gdk_device_get_window_at_position
gdk_device_get_window_at_position_double
gdk_device_get_last_event_window
gdk_display_get_monitor_at_window
gdk_drag_context_get_source_window
gdk_drag_context_get_dest_window
gdk_drag_context_get_drag_window
gdk_draw_context_get_window
gdk_drawing_context_get_window
gdk_gl_context_get_window
gdk_synthesize_window_state
gdk_surface_get_window_type
gdk_x11_display_set_window_scale
gsk_renderer_new_for_window
gsk_renderer_get_window
gtk_text_view_buffer_to_window_coords
gtk_tree_view_convert_widget_to_bin_window_coords
gtk_tree_view_convert_tree_to_bin_window_coords
The commands that generated this are:
git sed -f g "GDK window" "GDK surface"
git sed -f g window_impl surface_impl
(cd gdk; git sed -f g impl_window impl_surface)
git sed -f g WINDOW_IMPL SURFACE_IMPL
git sed -f g GDK_MODE_WINDOW GDK_MODE_SURFACE
git sed -f g gdk_draw_context_get_window gdk_draw_context_get_surface
git sed -f g gdk_drawing_context_get_window gdk_drawing_context_get_surface
git sed -f g gdk_gl_context_get_window gdk_gl_context_get_surface
git sed -f g gsk_renderer_get_window gsk_renderer_get_surface
git sed -f g gsk_renderer_new_for_window gsk_renderer_new_for_surface
(cd gdk; git sed -f g window_type surface_type)
git sed -f g gdk_surface_get_window_type gdk_surface_get_surface_type
git sed -f g window_at_position surface_at_position
git sed -f g event_window event_surface
git sed -f g window_coord surface_coord
git sed -f g window_state surface_state
git sed -f g window_cursor surface_cursor
git sed -f g window_scale surface_scale
git sed -f g window_events surface_events
git sed -f g monitor_at_window monitor_at_surface
git sed -f g window_under_pointer surface_under_pointer
(cd gdk; git sed -f g for_window for_surface)
git sed -f g window_anchor surface_anchor
git sed -f g WINDOW_IS_TOPLEVEL SURFACE_IS_TOPLEVEL
git sed -f g native_window native_surface
git sed -f g source_window source_surface
git sed -f g dest_window dest_surface
git sed -f g drag_window drag_surface
git sed -f g input_window input_surface
git checkout NEWS* po-properties po docs/reference/gtk/migrating-3to4.xml
This renames the GdkWindow class and related classes (impl, backend
subclasses) to surface. Additionally it renames related types:
GdkWindowAttr, GdkWindowPaint, GdkWindowWindowClass, GdkWindowType,
GdkWindowTypeHint, GdkWindowHints, GdkWindowState, GdkWindowEdge
This is an automatic conversion using the below commands:
git sed -f g GdkWindowWindowClass GdkSurfaceSurfaceClass
git sed -f g GdkWindow GdkSurface
git sed -f g "gdk_window\([ _\(\),;]\|$\)" "gdk_surface\1" # Avoid hitting gdk_windowing
git sed -f g "GDK_WINDOW\([ _\(]\|$\)" "GDK_SURFACE\1" # Avoid hitting GDK_WINDOWING
git sed "GDK_\([A-Z]*\)IS_WINDOW\([_ (]\|$\)" "GDK_\1IS_SURFACE\2"
git sed GDK_TYPE_WINDOW GDK_TYPE_SURFACE
git sed -f g GdkPointerWindowInfo GdkPointerSurfaceInfo
git sed -f g "BROADWAY_WINDOW" "BROADWAY_SURFACE"
git sed -f g "broadway_window" "broadway_surface"
git sed -f g "BroadwayWindow" "BroadwaySurface"
git sed -f g "WAYLAND_WINDOW" "WAYLAND_SURFACE"
git sed -f g "wayland_window" "wayland_surface"
git sed -f g "WaylandWindow" "WaylandSurface"
git sed -f g "X11_WINDOW" "X11_SURFACE"
git sed -f g "x11_window" "x11_surface"
git sed -f g "X11Window" "X11Surface"
git sed -f g "WIN32_WINDOW" "WIN32_SURFACE"
git sed -f g "win32_window" "win32_surface"
git sed -f g "Win32Window" "Win32Surface"
git sed -f g "QUARTZ_WINDOW" "QUARTZ_SURFACE"
git sed -f g "quartz_window" "quartz_surface"
git sed -f g "QuartzWindow" "QuartzSurface"
git checkout NEWS* po-properties
As far as possible, use per-display debug flags.
This will minimize the debug spew that we get from
the inspector if it is running on a separate display.
We should be smarter in picking a good device eventually,
but for now, we just allow to explicitly choose one. To
see a list of all devices, use GDK_VULKAN_DEVICE=list
To specify which device to use, use GDK_VULKAN_DEVICE=<number>
The code that checks for the proper size of the our swapchain
was not taking window scale fully into account. With this change,
setting the window scale to 2 in the inspector causes the window
to grow and rendering to be scaled up as expected, with Vulkan,
in the same way it already is with cairo.
This patch makes that work using 1 of 2 options:
1. Add all missing enums to the switch statement
or
2. Cast the switch argument to a uint to avoid having to do that (mostly
for GdkEventType).
I even found a bug while doing that: clearing a GtkImage with a surface
did not notify thae surface property.
The reason for enabling this flag even though it is tedious at times is
that it is very useful when adding values to an enum, because it makes
GTK immediately warn about all the switch statements where this enum is
relevant.
And I expect changes to enums to be frequent during the GTK4 development
cycle.
The callback function that is used by VkDebugReportCallbackCreateInfoEXT
is decorated with VKAPI_CALL (which is __stdcall on Windows). This is
not detected on x64 Windows as __stdcall is not really meaningful on x64
Windows, and VKAPI_CALL expands to nothing on non-Windows.
As __stdcall functions are treated differently on 32-bit Windows, the
32-bit compiler does require that the function be declared as __stdcall
so that things will compile, link and run properly.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id-773299
Previously, code would work fine with --disable-vulkan if the Vulkan
headers were installed - code would happily just use them as they're
installed in /usr/include.