The validate command does need a display connection,
for better or worse. So exit in an orderly fashion
if we don't have one, instead of crashing.
Fixes: #5948
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.
When color-matrix modifying a clear surface, the surface would remain
clear according to Cairo.
That's very unfortunate when we prepare a mask for inverted-alpha
masking.
If we build our own targets, we need to include those.
This is only relevant when adding new shaders because meson will
complain that the (unused) sources don't exist as it tries to include
those.
And that will make the build.ninja file not be generated which would
have build those shaders and would have allowed to copy them into the
sources.
Note that this makes builds with glslc not care about all the shader
files being included with the sources, but we have CI to check that.
In particular, catch radius values being < 0 by return_if_fail()ing in
the rendernode creation code, and by erroring out in the rendernode
parser.
I try too much dumb stuff in the node editor.
As this script is now also used in GLib, unify the formatting between
GLib and GTK. Make the formatting of the script conformant to the
Black[1] tool, as GLib requires, and add a copyright header to this
script.
[1]: https://black.readthedocs.io/en/stable/, see also
$(glibsrcroot)/.gitlab-ci/run-bash.sh
Our default theme is now Default, not Adwaita, & HighContrastInverse was
renamed to Default-hc. So these checks did not work anymore. Rather than
hard-coding the new names, & possibly running into the same issue again,
we can just look for the convention of appending -dark to the theme name
and/or the Settings:prefer-dark-theme prop. The latter, we can & likely
SHOULD also apply to all themes - not just ours as before. We also check
for the :dark suffix as that means the theme variant - & before checking
GtkSettings check the GTK_THEME env var, just as GtkSettings itself does
The objcopy+ld approach to fast resource building
relies on behavior that is specific to the binutils
linker, and does not work with the llvm one.
Therefore, check for ld.bfd. We still fall back
to trying with just ld, since I'm not 100% sure
if binutils unconditionally installs ld.bfd.
Fixes: #5672
Fixes https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gtk/-/issues/5922
The docs of `Gtk.DropTarget::accept` say this:
> If the decision whether the drop will be accepted or rejected depends
> on the data, [`::accept`] should return `TRUE`, [`:preload`] should be
> set and the value should be inspected via the `::notify:value` signal,
> calling `gtk_drop_target_reject()` if required.
But this pattern causes a CRITICAL, given these steps:
* Create a `DragSource` and `DropTarget`
* Keep the default `::accept` handler and set `:preload` to `TRUE`
* Connect to `notify::value` and therein call `DropTarget.reject()`
* CRITICAL at `DropTarget.enter()`→`Drop.get_actions()` on NULL instance
We should let the documented case work without a CRITICAL or worse, null
deref. And per @otte on the bug, we should bail earlier before `::enter`
& setting `GTK_STATE_FLAG_DROP_ACTIVE`; neither should occur if rejected
This fixes that, by checking after `start_drop()` when notifications are
thawed, whether any handler has `reject()`ed & set our `drop` to `NULL`.
The IFUNC resolvers that we are using here get
run early, before asan had a chance to set up its
plumbing, and therefore things go badly if they
are compiled with asan. Turning it off makes things
work again.
The gcc bug tracking this problem:
https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=110442
Thanks to Jakub Jelinek and Florian Weimer for
analyzing this and recommending the workaround.
g_hash_table_insert() frees the given key if it already exists
in the hashtable. But since we use the same pointer in the
following line, it will result in use-after-free.
So instead, insert the key only if it doesn't exist.