Failure to do so results in custom styling leaking through in
the inspector. This is pretty obvious, now that the inspector
is using a separate display connection and is generally isolated
from style changes.
In various places, the broadway backend was just using
the default display and assumed that it is the broadway
display. That may not be the case in a multi-backend world,
so instead iterate over all displays and use the first
broadway display - still not perfect, but enough to survive
for now.
When the window is on a non-default screen, popover_realize
ended up passing a visual and a parent_window from different
screens into gdk_window_new, which doesn't work. Fix it by
using the visual of the parent window.
GtkStyleContext was not properly handling the style cascade when
setting a screen, causing the inspector global CSS to affect the
inspector window, even though the inspector is using a different
screen now.
This helps isolate the inspector from some of the changes that
it can trigger. To specify a different display, set
GTK_INSPECTOR_DISPLAY to the name of the display to use for
the inspector window. If no display is specified, GTK+ will
use a separate connection to the default display.
When a new screen is set on a window, we unrealize it, to
recreate all the resources. But we don't reset the client_decorated
flag, so realize() doesn't call create_decoration() - which makes
sense, since the decoration already exists. But the side-effect
of create_decoration() is to select the rgba visual, and visuals
are per-screen.
Fix this by looking for the rgba visual in set_screen(), and
replacing it with the rgba visual for the new screen, if necessary.
This special code was added back in the days when computation wasn't
idemptotent. These days it is.
Also, the bypass code path is only used in fallback code that is pretty
much unused.
The gtkglarea and sidebar demos have been added, so build them in the
projects. Note that the gtkglarea code is not usable under Windows at this
point as implementation is needed for the GDK-Win32 backend.
Patches have been submitted to the libepoxy project so that it can be built
under Visual Studio. This will allow the GDK, GTK and gtk3-demo projects
to build, but the gtkglarea code is not usable at this time as
implementation needs to be added to the GDK-Win32 backend for it.
"Install" gdkbroadwaydisplay.h, as it is a public header of GDK Broadway,
also fix the MSVC 2010+ gtk-copy-gdk-broadway.props property sheet as a
'>' is missing. Sorry for not noting these issues earlier, as MSVC
Broadway builds were recently restored. My bad :|
The current implementation of this script generate headers with \x-escaped
strings that can become too long (> 65535 characters) for Visual Studio
to consume, hence the build of broadwayd would break on Visual Studio.
This changes the script to instead format the string as an array of hex
characters, not unlike what GResource does, so that builds can continue as
normal on Visual Studio builds as well.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=739001
We recently changed the uppercase licensing text to lower case. The
reference test that checks the contents of the about dialog has to be
fixed to reflect that change.
There is now a broadway-buffer.c source that needs to be built for this, so
add it into the projects. Since crypt() is no longer used, don't include
crypt.c in the builds, and so clean up the projects a bit.