gtk2/gdk/macos/gdkmacosclipboard.c

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macos: prototype new GDK backend for macOS This is fairly substantial rewrite of the GDK backend for quartz and renamed to macOS to allow for a greenfield implementation. Many things have come across from the quartz implementation fairly intact such as the eventloop integration design and discovery of event windows from the NSEvent. However much has been changed to fit in with the new GDK design and how removal of child GdkWindow have been completely eliminated. Furthermore, the new GdkPopup allows for regular NSWindow to be used to provide popovers unlike the previous implementation. The object design more closely follows the ideal for a GDK backend. Views have been broken out into subclasses so that we can support multiple GSK renderer paths such as GL and Cairo (and Metal in the future). However mixed mode GL and Cairo will not be supported. Currently only the Cairo renderer has been implemented. A new frame clock implementation using CVDisplayLink provides more accurate information about when to draw drawing the next frame. Some testing will need to be done here to understand the power implications of this. This implementation has also gained edge snapping for CSD windows. Some work was also done to ensure that CSD windows have opaque regions registered with the display server. ** This is still very much a work-in-progress ** Some outstanding work that needs to be done: - Finish a GL context for macOS and alternate NSView for GL rendering (possibly using speciailized CALayer for OpenGL). - Input rework to ensure that we don't loose remapping of keys that was dropped from GDK during GTK 4 development. - Make sure input methods continue to work. - Drag-n-Drop is still very much a work in progress - High resolution input scrolling needs various work in GDK to land first before we can plumb that to NSEvent. - gtk/ has a number of things based on GDK_WINDOWING_QUARTZ that need to be updated to use the macOS backend. But this is good enough to start playing with and breaking things which is what I'd like to see.
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/*
* Copyright © 2020 Red Hat, Inc.
*
* This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
* modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public
* License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either
* version 2.1 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
*
* This library is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
* but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
* MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU
* Lesser General Public License for more details.
*
* You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public
* License along with this library. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
*
* SPDX-License-Identifier: LGPL-2.1-or-later
*/
#include "config.h"
#include <glib/gi18n.h>
#include "gdkmacosclipboard-private.h"
#include "gdkmacospasteboard-private.h"
macos: prototype new GDK backend for macOS This is fairly substantial rewrite of the GDK backend for quartz and renamed to macOS to allow for a greenfield implementation. Many things have come across from the quartz implementation fairly intact such as the eventloop integration design and discovery of event windows from the NSEvent. However much has been changed to fit in with the new GDK design and how removal of child GdkWindow have been completely eliminated. Furthermore, the new GdkPopup allows for regular NSWindow to be used to provide popovers unlike the previous implementation. The object design more closely follows the ideal for a GDK backend. Views have been broken out into subclasses so that we can support multiple GSK renderer paths such as GL and Cairo (and Metal in the future). However mixed mode GL and Cairo will not be supported. Currently only the Cairo renderer has been implemented. A new frame clock implementation using CVDisplayLink provides more accurate information about when to draw drawing the next frame. Some testing will need to be done here to understand the power implications of this. This implementation has also gained edge snapping for CSD windows. Some work was also done to ensure that CSD windows have opaque regions registered with the display server. ** This is still very much a work-in-progress ** Some outstanding work that needs to be done: - Finish a GL context for macOS and alternate NSView for GL rendering (possibly using speciailized CALayer for OpenGL). - Input rework to ensure that we don't loose remapping of keys that was dropped from GDK during GTK 4 development. - Make sure input methods continue to work. - Drag-n-Drop is still very much a work in progress - High resolution input scrolling needs various work in GDK to land first before we can plumb that to NSEvent. - gtk/ has a number of things based on GDK_WINDOWING_QUARTZ that need to be updated to use the macOS backend. But this is good enough to start playing with and breaking things which is what I'd like to see.
2020-04-23 23:36:46 +00:00
#include "gdkmacosutils-private.h"
#include "gdkprivate.h"
macos: prototype new GDK backend for macOS This is fairly substantial rewrite of the GDK backend for quartz and renamed to macOS to allow for a greenfield implementation. Many things have come across from the quartz implementation fairly intact such as the eventloop integration design and discovery of event windows from the NSEvent. However much has been changed to fit in with the new GDK design and how removal of child GdkWindow have been completely eliminated. Furthermore, the new GdkPopup allows for regular NSWindow to be used to provide popovers unlike the previous implementation. The object design more closely follows the ideal for a GDK backend. Views have been broken out into subclasses so that we can support multiple GSK renderer paths such as GL and Cairo (and Metal in the future). However mixed mode GL and Cairo will not be supported. Currently only the Cairo renderer has been implemented. A new frame clock implementation using CVDisplayLink provides more accurate information about when to draw drawing the next frame. Some testing will need to be done here to understand the power implications of this. This implementation has also gained edge snapping for CSD windows. Some work was also done to ensure that CSD windows have opaque regions registered with the display server. ** This is still very much a work-in-progress ** Some outstanding work that needs to be done: - Finish a GL context for macOS and alternate NSView for GL rendering (possibly using speciailized CALayer for OpenGL). - Input rework to ensure that we don't loose remapping of keys that was dropped from GDK during GTK 4 development. - Make sure input methods continue to work. - Drag-n-Drop is still very much a work in progress - High resolution input scrolling needs various work in GDK to land first before we can plumb that to NSEvent. - gtk/ has a number of things based on GDK_WINDOWING_QUARTZ that need to be updated to use the macOS backend. But this is good enough to start playing with and breaking things which is what I'd like to see.
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struct _GdkMacosClipboard
{
GdkClipboard parent_instance;
NSPasteboard *pasteboard;
NSInteger last_change_count;
};
G_DEFINE_TYPE (GdkMacosClipboard, _gdk_macos_clipboard, GDK_TYPE_CLIPBOARD)
static void
_gdk_macos_clipboard_load_contents (GdkMacosClipboard *self)
{
GdkContentFormats *formats;
NSInteger change_count;
g_assert (GDK_IS_MACOS_CLIPBOARD (self));
change_count = [self->pasteboard changeCount];
formats = _gdk_macos_pasteboard_load_formats (self->pasteboard);
macos: prototype new GDK backend for macOS This is fairly substantial rewrite of the GDK backend for quartz and renamed to macOS to allow for a greenfield implementation. Many things have come across from the quartz implementation fairly intact such as the eventloop integration design and discovery of event windows from the NSEvent. However much has been changed to fit in with the new GDK design and how removal of child GdkWindow have been completely eliminated. Furthermore, the new GdkPopup allows for regular NSWindow to be used to provide popovers unlike the previous implementation. The object design more closely follows the ideal for a GDK backend. Views have been broken out into subclasses so that we can support multiple GSK renderer paths such as GL and Cairo (and Metal in the future). However mixed mode GL and Cairo will not be supported. Currently only the Cairo renderer has been implemented. A new frame clock implementation using CVDisplayLink provides more accurate information about when to draw drawing the next frame. Some testing will need to be done here to understand the power implications of this. This implementation has also gained edge snapping for CSD windows. Some work was also done to ensure that CSD windows have opaque regions registered with the display server. ** This is still very much a work-in-progress ** Some outstanding work that needs to be done: - Finish a GL context for macOS and alternate NSView for GL rendering (possibly using speciailized CALayer for OpenGL). - Input rework to ensure that we don't loose remapping of keys that was dropped from GDK during GTK 4 development. - Make sure input methods continue to work. - Drag-n-Drop is still very much a work in progress - High resolution input scrolling needs various work in GDK to land first before we can plumb that to NSEvent. - gtk/ has a number of things based on GDK_WINDOWING_QUARTZ that need to be updated to use the macOS backend. But this is good enough to start playing with and breaking things which is what I'd like to see.
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gdk_clipboard_claim_remote (GDK_CLIPBOARD (self), formats);
gdk_content_formats_unref (formats);
self->last_change_count = change_count;
}
static void
_gdk_macos_clipboard_read_async (GdkClipboard *clipboard,
GdkContentFormats *formats,
int io_priority,
GCancellable *cancellable,
GAsyncReadyCallback callback,
gpointer user_data)
{
_gdk_macos_pasteboard_read_async (G_OBJECT (clipboard),
GDK_MACOS_CLIPBOARD (clipboard)->pasteboard,
formats,
io_priority,
cancellable,
callback,
user_data);
macos: prototype new GDK backend for macOS This is fairly substantial rewrite of the GDK backend for quartz and renamed to macOS to allow for a greenfield implementation. Many things have come across from the quartz implementation fairly intact such as the eventloop integration design and discovery of event windows from the NSEvent. However much has been changed to fit in with the new GDK design and how removal of child GdkWindow have been completely eliminated. Furthermore, the new GdkPopup allows for regular NSWindow to be used to provide popovers unlike the previous implementation. The object design more closely follows the ideal for a GDK backend. Views have been broken out into subclasses so that we can support multiple GSK renderer paths such as GL and Cairo (and Metal in the future). However mixed mode GL and Cairo will not be supported. Currently only the Cairo renderer has been implemented. A new frame clock implementation using CVDisplayLink provides more accurate information about when to draw drawing the next frame. Some testing will need to be done here to understand the power implications of this. This implementation has also gained edge snapping for CSD windows. Some work was also done to ensure that CSD windows have opaque regions registered with the display server. ** This is still very much a work-in-progress ** Some outstanding work that needs to be done: - Finish a GL context for macOS and alternate NSView for GL rendering (possibly using speciailized CALayer for OpenGL). - Input rework to ensure that we don't loose remapping of keys that was dropped from GDK during GTK 4 development. - Make sure input methods continue to work. - Drag-n-Drop is still very much a work in progress - High resolution input scrolling needs various work in GDK to land first before we can plumb that to NSEvent. - gtk/ has a number of things based on GDK_WINDOWING_QUARTZ that need to be updated to use the macOS backend. But this is good enough to start playing with and breaking things which is what I'd like to see.
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}
static GInputStream *
_gdk_macos_clipboard_read_finish (GdkClipboard *clipboard,
GAsyncResult *result,
const char **out_mime_type,
GError **error)
{
return _gdk_macos_pasteboard_read_finish (G_OBJECT (clipboard), result, out_mime_type, error);
macos: prototype new GDK backend for macOS This is fairly substantial rewrite of the GDK backend for quartz and renamed to macOS to allow for a greenfield implementation. Many things have come across from the quartz implementation fairly intact such as the eventloop integration design and discovery of event windows from the NSEvent. However much has been changed to fit in with the new GDK design and how removal of child GdkWindow have been completely eliminated. Furthermore, the new GdkPopup allows for regular NSWindow to be used to provide popovers unlike the previous implementation. The object design more closely follows the ideal for a GDK backend. Views have been broken out into subclasses so that we can support multiple GSK renderer paths such as GL and Cairo (and Metal in the future). However mixed mode GL and Cairo will not be supported. Currently only the Cairo renderer has been implemented. A new frame clock implementation using CVDisplayLink provides more accurate information about when to draw drawing the next frame. Some testing will need to be done here to understand the power implications of this. This implementation has also gained edge snapping for CSD windows. Some work was also done to ensure that CSD windows have opaque regions registered with the display server. ** This is still very much a work-in-progress ** Some outstanding work that needs to be done: - Finish a GL context for macOS and alternate NSView for GL rendering (possibly using speciailized CALayer for OpenGL). - Input rework to ensure that we don't loose remapping of keys that was dropped from GDK during GTK 4 development. - Make sure input methods continue to work. - Drag-n-Drop is still very much a work in progress - High resolution input scrolling needs various work in GDK to land first before we can plumb that to NSEvent. - gtk/ has a number of things based on GDK_WINDOWING_QUARTZ that need to be updated to use the macOS backend. But this is good enough to start playing with and breaking things which is what I'd like to see.
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}
static void
_gdk_macos_clipboard_send_to_pasteboard (GdkMacosClipboard *self,
GdkContentProvider *content)
{
GdkMacosPasteboardItem *item;
NSArray<NSPasteboardItem *> *items;
macos: prototype new GDK backend for macOS This is fairly substantial rewrite of the GDK backend for quartz and renamed to macOS to allow for a greenfield implementation. Many things have come across from the quartz implementation fairly intact such as the eventloop integration design and discovery of event windows from the NSEvent. However much has been changed to fit in with the new GDK design and how removal of child GdkWindow have been completely eliminated. Furthermore, the new GdkPopup allows for regular NSWindow to be used to provide popovers unlike the previous implementation. The object design more closely follows the ideal for a GDK backend. Views have been broken out into subclasses so that we can support multiple GSK renderer paths such as GL and Cairo (and Metal in the future). However mixed mode GL and Cairo will not be supported. Currently only the Cairo renderer has been implemented. A new frame clock implementation using CVDisplayLink provides more accurate information about when to draw drawing the next frame. Some testing will need to be done here to understand the power implications of this. This implementation has also gained edge snapping for CSD windows. Some work was also done to ensure that CSD windows have opaque regions registered with the display server. ** This is still very much a work-in-progress ** Some outstanding work that needs to be done: - Finish a GL context for macOS and alternate NSView for GL rendering (possibly using speciailized CALayer for OpenGL). - Input rework to ensure that we don't loose remapping of keys that was dropped from GDK during GTK 4 development. - Make sure input methods continue to work. - Drag-n-Drop is still very much a work in progress - High resolution input scrolling needs various work in GDK to land first before we can plumb that to NSEvent. - gtk/ has a number of things based on GDK_WINDOWING_QUARTZ that need to be updated to use the macOS backend. But this is good enough to start playing with and breaking things which is what I'd like to see.
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g_assert (GDK_IS_MACOS_CLIPBOARD (self));
g_assert (GDK_IS_CONTENT_PROVIDER (content));
macos: prototype new GDK backend for macOS This is fairly substantial rewrite of the GDK backend for quartz and renamed to macOS to allow for a greenfield implementation. Many things have come across from the quartz implementation fairly intact such as the eventloop integration design and discovery of event windows from the NSEvent. However much has been changed to fit in with the new GDK design and how removal of child GdkWindow have been completely eliminated. Furthermore, the new GdkPopup allows for regular NSWindow to be used to provide popovers unlike the previous implementation. The object design more closely follows the ideal for a GDK backend. Views have been broken out into subclasses so that we can support multiple GSK renderer paths such as GL and Cairo (and Metal in the future). However mixed mode GL and Cairo will not be supported. Currently only the Cairo renderer has been implemented. A new frame clock implementation using CVDisplayLink provides more accurate information about when to draw drawing the next frame. Some testing will need to be done here to understand the power implications of this. This implementation has also gained edge snapping for CSD windows. Some work was also done to ensure that CSD windows have opaque regions registered with the display server. ** This is still very much a work-in-progress ** Some outstanding work that needs to be done: - Finish a GL context for macOS and alternate NSView for GL rendering (possibly using speciailized CALayer for OpenGL). - Input rework to ensure that we don't loose remapping of keys that was dropped from GDK during GTK 4 development. - Make sure input methods continue to work. - Drag-n-Drop is still very much a work in progress - High resolution input scrolling needs various work in GDK to land first before we can plumb that to NSEvent. - gtk/ has a number of things based on GDK_WINDOWING_QUARTZ that need to be updated to use the macOS backend. But this is good enough to start playing with and breaking things which is what I'd like to see.
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if (self->pasteboard == NULL)
return;
macos: prototype new GDK backend for macOS This is fairly substantial rewrite of the GDK backend for quartz and renamed to macOS to allow for a greenfield implementation. Many things have come across from the quartz implementation fairly intact such as the eventloop integration design and discovery of event windows from the NSEvent. However much has been changed to fit in with the new GDK design and how removal of child GdkWindow have been completely eliminated. Furthermore, the new GdkPopup allows for regular NSWindow to be used to provide popovers unlike the previous implementation. The object design more closely follows the ideal for a GDK backend. Views have been broken out into subclasses so that we can support multiple GSK renderer paths such as GL and Cairo (and Metal in the future). However mixed mode GL and Cairo will not be supported. Currently only the Cairo renderer has been implemented. A new frame clock implementation using CVDisplayLink provides more accurate information about when to draw drawing the next frame. Some testing will need to be done here to understand the power implications of this. This implementation has also gained edge snapping for CSD windows. Some work was also done to ensure that CSD windows have opaque regions registered with the display server. ** This is still very much a work-in-progress ** Some outstanding work that needs to be done: - Finish a GL context for macOS and alternate NSView for GL rendering (possibly using speciailized CALayer for OpenGL). - Input rework to ensure that we don't loose remapping of keys that was dropped from GDK during GTK 4 development. - Make sure input methods continue to work. - Drag-n-Drop is still very much a work in progress - High resolution input scrolling needs various work in GDK to land first before we can plumb that to NSEvent. - gtk/ has a number of things based on GDK_WINDOWING_QUARTZ that need to be updated to use the macOS backend. But this is good enough to start playing with and breaking things which is what I'd like to see.
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GDK_BEGIN_MACOS_ALLOC_POOL;
item = [[GdkMacosPasteboardItem alloc] initForClipboard:GDK_CLIPBOARD (self) withContentProvider:content];
items = [NSArray arrayWithObject:item];
[self->pasteboard clearContents];
if ([self->pasteboard writeObjects:items] == NO)
g_warning ("Failed to send clipboard to pasteboard");
macos: prototype new GDK backend for macOS This is fairly substantial rewrite of the GDK backend for quartz and renamed to macOS to allow for a greenfield implementation. Many things have come across from the quartz implementation fairly intact such as the eventloop integration design and discovery of event windows from the NSEvent. However much has been changed to fit in with the new GDK design and how removal of child GdkWindow have been completely eliminated. Furthermore, the new GdkPopup allows for regular NSWindow to be used to provide popovers unlike the previous implementation. The object design more closely follows the ideal for a GDK backend. Views have been broken out into subclasses so that we can support multiple GSK renderer paths such as GL and Cairo (and Metal in the future). However mixed mode GL and Cairo will not be supported. Currently only the Cairo renderer has been implemented. A new frame clock implementation using CVDisplayLink provides more accurate information about when to draw drawing the next frame. Some testing will need to be done here to understand the power implications of this. This implementation has also gained edge snapping for CSD windows. Some work was also done to ensure that CSD windows have opaque regions registered with the display server. ** This is still very much a work-in-progress ** Some outstanding work that needs to be done: - Finish a GL context for macOS and alternate NSView for GL rendering (possibly using speciailized CALayer for OpenGL). - Input rework to ensure that we don't loose remapping of keys that was dropped from GDK during GTK 4 development. - Make sure input methods continue to work. - Drag-n-Drop is still very much a work in progress - High resolution input scrolling needs various work in GDK to land first before we can plumb that to NSEvent. - gtk/ has a number of things based on GDK_WINDOWING_QUARTZ that need to be updated to use the macOS backend. But this is good enough to start playing with and breaking things which is what I'd like to see.
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self->last_change_count = [self->pasteboard changeCount];
GDK_END_MACOS_ALLOC_POOL;
macos: prototype new GDK backend for macOS This is fairly substantial rewrite of the GDK backend for quartz and renamed to macOS to allow for a greenfield implementation. Many things have come across from the quartz implementation fairly intact such as the eventloop integration design and discovery of event windows from the NSEvent. However much has been changed to fit in with the new GDK design and how removal of child GdkWindow have been completely eliminated. Furthermore, the new GdkPopup allows for regular NSWindow to be used to provide popovers unlike the previous implementation. The object design more closely follows the ideal for a GDK backend. Views have been broken out into subclasses so that we can support multiple GSK renderer paths such as GL and Cairo (and Metal in the future). However mixed mode GL and Cairo will not be supported. Currently only the Cairo renderer has been implemented. A new frame clock implementation using CVDisplayLink provides more accurate information about when to draw drawing the next frame. Some testing will need to be done here to understand the power implications of this. This implementation has also gained edge snapping for CSD windows. Some work was also done to ensure that CSD windows have opaque regions registered with the display server. ** This is still very much a work-in-progress ** Some outstanding work that needs to be done: - Finish a GL context for macOS and alternate NSView for GL rendering (possibly using speciailized CALayer for OpenGL). - Input rework to ensure that we don't loose remapping of keys that was dropped from GDK during GTK 4 development. - Make sure input methods continue to work. - Drag-n-Drop is still very much a work in progress - High resolution input scrolling needs various work in GDK to land first before we can plumb that to NSEvent. - gtk/ has a number of things based on GDK_WINDOWING_QUARTZ that need to be updated to use the macOS backend. But this is good enough to start playing with and breaking things which is what I'd like to see.
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}
static gboolean
_gdk_macos_clipboard_claim (GdkClipboard *clipboard,
GdkContentFormats *formats,
gboolean local,
GdkContentProvider *provider)
{
GdkMacosClipboard *self = (GdkMacosClipboard *)clipboard;
gboolean ret;
g_assert (GDK_IS_CLIPBOARD (clipboard));
g_assert (formats != NULL);
g_assert (!provider || GDK_IS_CONTENT_PROVIDER (provider));
ret = GDK_CLIPBOARD_CLASS (_gdk_macos_clipboard_parent_class)->claim (clipboard, formats, local, provider);
if (local)
_gdk_macos_clipboard_send_to_pasteboard (self, provider);
return ret;
}
static void
_gdk_macos_clipboard_constructed (GObject *object)
{
GdkMacosClipboard *self = (GdkMacosClipboard *)object;
if (self->pasteboard == nil)
self->pasteboard = [[NSPasteboard generalPasteboard] retain];
G_OBJECT_CLASS (_gdk_macos_clipboard_parent_class)->constructed (object);
}
static void
_gdk_macos_clipboard_finalize (GObject *object)
{
GdkMacosClipboard *self = (GdkMacosClipboard *)object;
if (self->pasteboard != nil)
{
[self->pasteboard release];
self->pasteboard = nil;
}
G_OBJECT_CLASS (_gdk_macos_clipboard_parent_class)->finalize (object);
}
static void
_gdk_macos_clipboard_class_init (GdkMacosClipboardClass *klass)
{
GObjectClass *object_class = G_OBJECT_CLASS (klass);
GdkClipboardClass *clipboard_class = GDK_CLIPBOARD_CLASS (klass);
object_class->constructed = _gdk_macos_clipboard_constructed;
object_class->finalize = _gdk_macos_clipboard_finalize;
clipboard_class->claim = _gdk_macos_clipboard_claim;
clipboard_class->read_async = _gdk_macos_clipboard_read_async;
clipboard_class->read_finish = _gdk_macos_clipboard_read_finish;
}
static void
_gdk_macos_clipboard_init (GdkMacosClipboard *self)
{
}
GdkClipboard *
_gdk_macos_clipboard_new (GdkMacosDisplay *display)
{
GdkMacosClipboard *self;
g_return_val_if_fail (GDK_IS_MACOS_DISPLAY (display), NULL);
self = g_object_new (GDK_TYPE_MACOS_CLIPBOARD,
"display", display,
NULL);
_gdk_macos_clipboard_load_contents (self);
return GDK_CLIPBOARD (self);
}
void
_gdk_macos_clipboard_check_externally_modified (GdkMacosClipboard *self)
{
g_return_if_fail (GDK_IS_MACOS_CLIPBOARD (self));
if ([self->pasteboard changeCount] != self->last_change_count)
_gdk_macos_clipboard_load_contents (self);
}