The code in _gdk_wayland_window_dispose was not safe against
being called twice - it would call g_hash_table_destroy twice
on the known_globals hash table, the second time operating on
freed memory. It was also leaking the list of async_roundtrips.
After fixing both of these issues, the displayclose testcase
now works on Wayland.
As the protocol is still considered unstable (meaning not backward
compatible), we should, as stated in the protocol, only bind the version
advertised is the version we implement.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=753856
wl_log() currently logs using G_LOG_LEVEL_ERROR
(which is fatal). The wayland client library doesn't
expect this behavior. It uses wl_log to log recoverable
errors.
This commit changes the log level to G_LOG_LEVEL_DEBUG
instead.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=753635
On wayland, the gestures protocol defines a wl_pointer_gestures global
object, that will match in number with wl_seats, swipe and pinch
interfaces can be obtained from it, which events are translated into
GdkEventTouchpadSwipe/Pinch events.
Some features need certain globals to initialize. In order to deal with
these dependencies, add a way to postpone closures that depend on a
certain set of globals, that later will be invoked when required
globals are all received.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=719819
Instead use asynchronous round trips that is synchronized in the end of
the initialization. This makes it easier to track state, as we won't
dispatch arbitrary Wayland messages while processing globals.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=719819
When we open the connection, we get the wl_output object,
but we return before all the information such as monitor
geometry has arrived, which causes us to misinform early
users of this information. Do a roundtrip here that causes
us to wait until the information is complete. Do the same
for seats, just in case.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=747471
Support scaling of cursors created from themes. The default scale is
always 1, but if the pointer cursor surface enters an output with a
higher scale, load the larger version of the cursor theme and use the
image from that theme.
This assumes the theme size is set to one that fits with an output scale
= 1.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=746141
The gtk-shell Wayland protocol extension is not meant to be backward
compatible right now, so avoid binding to any version that is not the
one supported.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=745721
Before this patch, we'd always allocate a full size SHM buffer via
the wl_shm_pool, even though it would never be used. Instead allocate a
logical 1x1 cairo image surface.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=745076
Some compositors might not offer wl_seat 4 resulting in GTK+ clients not
working on that compositor.
wl_seat 4 introduces keyboard repeat information, but when that information
is missing it is retrieved from settings, hence there's no reason to
require wl_seat 4.
This patch was tested against QtCompositor (5.5, dev branch)
and Weston 1.6.1.
Reviewed-by: Daniel Stone <daniels@collabora.com>
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=744172
To properly support multithreaded use we use a global GPrivate
to track the current context. Since we also don't need to track
the current context on the display we move gdk_display_destroy_gl_context
to GdkGLContext::discard.
wayland doesn't strictly follow the XDG_RUNTIME_DIR spec by falling back
to another directory in case the runtime dir is not properly set.
When this variable is unset, wayland will log an error to us, which we
treat as fatal, aborting the entire program.
Skip ourselves all the trouble and don't try to bring up the wayland
backend when we know it will fail in this way.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=738873
The list of devices was being scanned over incorrectly, causing us to
never actually fetch the keymap from the keyboard, as the keyboard was
the second device in the list, not the first.
This causes us to create a new temporary keymap every time, which is
quite expensive, because it involves parsing the entire XKB
file. Scanning the list correctly will cause us to use the XKB rules
file that was passed to us.
This implementation makes the destination side of selections work
similarly to X11's, gdk_selection_convert() triggers data fetching,
which is notified through GDK_SELECTION_NOTIFY events on arrival,
the buffered data is then available through gdk_selection_property_get().
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=697855
Weston releases buffers almost immediately after they're done, which
means that GTK+ doesn't use a temporary surface and instead paints
directly onto the SHM backing store that Weston will use.
Normally, after painting to the temporary surface, GTK+ *replaces*
the existing backing surface with CAIRO_OPERATOR_SOURCE. However,
if we immediately paint to the backing surface, it might have junk
from the last paint in it. So clear out the backing surface whenever
somebody calls begin_paint_region().
Maybe we should just always use the temporary surface like the X11
codepath, since that prevents us from having to do weird things like
this, but oh well.
All the globals we care about should appear before doing anything
else, up-front, so a single round-trip after adding the registry
should be more than enough.
The compositing that is meant here is really specific to the
X11 Composite extension, and does not apply to Wayland.
This is very rarely used functionality anyway, and none of
the other backends support it.
Theoretically, we apply the shape mask client-side ourselves
with an ARGB32 pixmap and intersect it to get a union shape,
but I don't particularly care enough to write that code.
Realistic application code using bounding shapes in 2014 is
quite rare.