Check that the right filter is chosen and that that filter is
implemented correctly.
The test is disabled for Cairo because Cairo (or rather Pixman)
doesn't follow the filtering specifications for GL/Vulkan and in
particular the nearest filter picks a different pixel.
When shadows were offset - in particular when offset so the original
source was out of bounds of the result - the drawing code would create a
pattern for it that didn't include enough of it to compose a shadow.
Fix that by not creating those patterns anymore, but instead drawing the
source (potentially multiple times) at the required offsets.
While that does more drawing, it simplifies the shadow node draw code,
and that's the primary goal of the Cairo rendering.
Test included.
The code now follows gsk_rounded_rect_shrink() and with it the behavior
of the Cairo renderer and Webkit.
The old code did what the GL renderer and Cairo do, but I consider that
wrong.
I did not test Chrome.
Test attached
Cairo and the GL renderer have a different idea of how to handle
transitioning of colors outside the defined range.
Consider these stops:
black 50%, white 50%
What color is at 0%?
Cairo would transition between the last and first stop, ie it'd do a
white-to-black transition and end up at rgb(0.5,0.5,0.5) at 0%.
GL would behave as it would for non-repeating gradients and use black
for the range [0%..50%] and white for [50%..100%].
The web would rescale the range so the first stop would be at 0% and
the last stop would be at 100%, so this gradient would be illegal.
Considering that it's possible for code to transition between the
different behaviors by adding explicit stops at 0%/100%, I could choose
any method.
So I chose the simplest one, which is what the GL renderer does and
which treats repeating and non-repeating gradients the same.
Tests attached.
This tests the merging of nested color matrix nodes feature of
GtkSnapshot, which was broken before commit 082fdfdb24.
Signed-off-by: Sergey Bugaev <bugaevc@gmail.com>
This takes a render node tree and "replays" it by using the GtkSnapshot
machinery. We don't necesserily expect to get back an exactly equal
render node tree back, since GtkSnapshot applies various small
optimizations where possible, but the original and the replayed nodes
should render to identical textures.
Signed-off-by: Sergey Bugaev <bugaevc@gmail.com>
Inverted alpha masks have an effect on the source, even if the mask
doesn't cover the source at all - or worse, is completely clipped out.
The GL renderer handles this fine, but Cairo and Vulkan had
optimizations that got this wrong.
In particular, fix the combination of luminance and alpha. We want to do
mask = luminance * alpha
and for inverted
mask = (1.0 - luminance) * alpha
so add a test that makes sure we do that and then fix the code and
existing tests to conform to it.
This one tests a crossfade between two non-overlapping nodes with a clip
region that covers neither of the two nodes.
This tests that renderers can deal with clip regions that doesn't
overlap nodes in a situation where they will most likely want to create
an offscreen.
As offscreens are typically clipped to the clip region, this would cause
an empty offscreen and that can cause failures.
This was an experiment where an offscreen was translated inside an
existing clip.
Because renderers try to limit offscreens to the clip rect, this is
interesting, because they might get the translation wrong.
The rounded-clip-in-clip-3d test fails in GL when
flipped. Given that it was already excluded from cairo,
and also fails cairo when flipped, give up on it for now.
Add separate suites for running the gsk compare-render
tests with the --flip, --rotate or --repeat options.
A bunch of these fail currently, and need diagnosis.
In constrast to our other tests, these use
textures that are big enough to force slicing
with setting GSK_MAX_TEXTURE_SIZE, which we
will use in the following commits to improve
test coverage.
The GL renderer was creating sripes for nodes that were scaled in
particular ways, probably due to rounding errors.
This testsuite focuses on one of those stripes to make sure they are
gone.
This test fails if we naively create fullscale
intermediate offscreens. This was fixed in the
previous commits.
This tests the fixes in 22ba6b1f33 (for
cairo) and 3a0152b65f (for GL).