1. Rename the thing
2. Turn it from a signal to a vfunc
3. Pass the GtkCssStyleChange to it
We don't export any public API about the GtkCssStyleChange yet, it's
just a boring opaque struct.
According to the ICCCM spec [1], one should subtract the base size from
the window size before checking that the aspect ratio falls in range.
This change fixes shrinking Firefox Picture-in-Picture windows when
running KDE Plasma (with KWin as the window manager).
[1] https://tronche.com/gui/x/icccm/sec-4.html#s-4.1.2.3
When a new popup surface is created, it may end up
getting a resume-events signal from its frame clock
without having seen a flush-events first.
Don't unpause events in that case, since it messes
up the displays pause counter.
This was causing criticals with tooltips.
The "iconified" state is mostly an X11-ism; every other platform calls
this state "minimized" because it may not involve turning a window into
an icon at all.
Windows/surface's aren't supposed to be explicitly moved by any external
part, so don't provide API for doing so. Usage throughout Gdk is
replaced by the corresponding backend variants.
The generic layer still does the heavy lifting, leaving the backends
more or less just act as thin wrappers, dealing a bit with global
coordinate transformations. The end goal is to remove explicit surface
moving from the generic gdk layer.
To separate how toplevels and popups are configured, a first step is to
introduce a resize-only vfunc for backends to implement. It's meant to
only configure toplevel windows, i.e. popups. Currently it's used for
both types, but introducing the resize-only API is a first step.
Instead of the toplevel driving popups, have the popups listen to the
frame clock themselves. Otherwise, if the toplevel for some reason isn't
drawn by the compositor and stops drawing new frames, popups wouldn't
get painted either.
To make a frame clock tick as long as any of the associated surfaces
expect to receive ticks, make the surfaces inhibit freezing the clock,
instead of directly tell the frame clock to freeze itself.
This makes it so that as long as any surface using a certain frame clock
is not frozen (e.g. just received a frame event from the display
server), the frame clock will not be frozen.
With this, the frame clock is initiated as frozen, and won't be thawed
until any surface inhibits freeze. It will be frozen again, when every
surface has that previously inhibited freeze uninhibited freeze.
This gives us marks to track the duration of processing certain types of
GdkEvent. It also provides some basic struct information in cases where
having that information would likely be useful for debugging.
This function returns the position relative to
the surface parent, so will always return 0 for
non-popups. The out arguments don't need to
allow-none either - nobody passes NULL for these.
We maintain offsets for popups, so we can translate
coordinates between surfaces that are attached directly
or indirectly to the same toplevel. Add an api for that.
There is no need for popups to connect to the frame
clock to pause and unpause events on the display -
the toplevel already does it.
And don't connect to paint either - handle paint
on popups recursively.
Since we are now sharing frame clocks with multiple
surfaces, we can no longer dispose them unconditionally
when a surface goes away. Only do it if we are a
toplevel (without parent).
This was showing up as criticals on exit when opening
and closing any popover in widget factory.
This api is meant to mimic xdg-popover.grab - we
show the surface, and dismiss it when we get events
on other surfaces. For foreign surfaces, the compositor
handles that for us; for our own, we check outselves
before delivering events to GTK.
We don't need the complicated wrapper system anymore,
since client-side windows are gone. This commit moves
all the vfuncs to GtkSurfaceClass, and changes the
backends to just derive their surface implementation
from GdkSurface.
We want to use a gdk_surface_new_popup for popups,
and align the constructor names with the surface
types, so rename
gdk_surface_new_popup -> gdk_surface_new_temp
gdk_surface_new_popup_full -> gdk_surface_new_popup
The temp surface type will disappear eventually.
All the information in it is already contained
in the surface object we pass along, and none
of the backend implementations were using the
attributes at all.
We are not creating such surfaces anymore, and
they were only ever meaningfully implemented
on X11. Drop the concept, and the api for determining
if a surface is input-only.
Start by adding a constructor. We have to call it
gdk_surface_new_popup_full for now, since gdk_surface_new_popup
is taken. This may be reshuffled later.
GdkSurface::set_startup_id() is NULL on Win32 and would cause a segfault
if called.
While the documentation of the main caller of set_startup_id(),
gtk_window_set_startup_id(), mentions that it's not implemented on
Windows it can still be automatically called via Glade and simply doing
nothing on Win32 is going to be less disruptive than a segfault.
Now that GdkSurface has properties, it makes
sense to turn the frame clock into one too.
This will make it easier to reshuffle some
of the surface constructors later.
The skip-taskbar, skip-pager and urgency hints were
only ever implemented for X11, and are not very useful
with modern desktops. Relegate the functionality to
x11 backend api, and drop the GtkWindow api.
This is a very old X session management thing, and you
will be hard-pressed to find a session manager that can
make use of it, and even harder-pressed to find apps
using it to their advantage.
Change the all the begin_drag and begin_move apis in
GdkSurface and GtkWindow to expect surface coordinates.
Update the x11 implementation to translate to root
coordinates where it matters. Wayland is ignoring the
coordinates anyway.
Change gdk_surface_get/set_user_data to private
API and rename them to get/set_widget.
Also remove an unused associated function.
The last two places where the surface API is used
are in gtkroot.c and gtkwidget.c. Make them
use the private api.
The previous attempt at removing configure events entirely
was causing some dialogs not to show up under Wayland.
Presumably due to ordering issues with emitting ::size-change
out of the backend.
Instead, keep configure events in the event queue, but handle
them on the gdk side. This keeps the ordering intact, while
still removing configure events from the api. The dialogs
show up now.
This is to go along with the newly introduced GdkDrop.
This commit includes the necessary updates to the X11, Wayland
and Broadway backends. Other backends have to be updated separately.
In particular, this patch removes:
gdk_surface_get_events()
gdk_surface_set_events()
gdk_surface_get_device_events()
gdk_surface_set_device_events()
Event masks so far still exist for grabs.
This is the API used by GtkMenu to properly position menus on the screen
without requiring GTK to query the menu window's position or the work
area of where the window is positioned. It makes it possible to position
popup windows properly when using Wayland.
Make this API available to external users so custom popup windows can be
positioned properly as well.
Related: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gtk/issues/997
Now that all Cairo contexts are ported to managing cairo surfaces
themselves, the old fallback code that didi the managing is no longer
needed.
Also clarify the behavior of gdk_cairo_context_cairo_create() wrt the
vfunc by doing the early exit and the clipping outside of it.
As they require a draw context and the draw context is already bound to
the surface, it makes much more sense and reduces abiguity by moving
these APIs to the draw context.
As a side effect, we simplify GdkSurface APIs to a point where
GdkSurface now does not concern itself with drawing anymore at all,
apart from being the object that creates draw contexts.
And make the GdkCairoContext as abstract.
The idea of this and thje following commits is to get rid of all
Cairo code in gdksurface.c (and $backend/gdksurface-$backend.c)
by moving that code into the Cairo context files.
In particular, the GdkSurfaceClass.begin_frame/end_frame()
functions (which are currently exclusively used by the Cairo code
should end up being moved to GdkDrawContextClass.begin/end_frame().
This has multiple benefits:
1. It unifies code between the different drawing contexts.
GL lives in GLContext, Vulkan in VulkanContext and Cairo in
CairoContext. In turn, this makes it way easier to reason about
what's going on in surface-specific code. Currently pretty much
all backends do things wrong when they want to sync to drawing
or to the frame clock.
2. It makes the API of GdkSurface smaller. No drawing code (apart
from creating the contexts) needs to remain.
3. It confines Cairo to the Drawcontext, thereby making it way
more obvious when backends are still using it in situations
where it may now conflict with OpenGL (like when doing the dnd
failed animation or in the APIs that I'm removing in this
branch).
4. We have 2 very different types of Cairo contexts: The X/win32
model, where we have a natively supported Cairo backend but do
double buffering ourselves and use similar surfaces and the
Wayland/Broadway model where we use image surfaces without any
Cairo backend support and have to submit the buffers manually.
By not sharing code between those 2 versions, we can make the
actual code way smaller. We also get around the need to create
1x1 image surfaces in the Wayland backend where we pretend
there's a native Cairo surface.
This does nothing but disallow passing NULL to gdk_surface_begin_paint()
and instead require this context.
The ultimate goal is to split out Cairo drawing into its own source file
so it doesn't clutter up the generic rendering path.
That way, we can store the right region there: The actual painted area
instead of the exposed area (which is way too small).
Also, the GL context is the only user of this data, so storing it there
seems way smarter.
Instead of calling gdk_surface_invalidate_region(), just
gdk_surface_queue_expose() and rely on the renderer computing the diff
from the previous rendering.
If you want transparent region, you can just render them transparent.
If you want input shaping, use gdk_surface_input_shape_combine_region().
Also remove gtk_widget_shape_combine_region().
... and its implementation in the X11 backend.
GDK does lots of work trying to reduce the region in expose events
so that when the server sends multiple expose events, touching the
same area we can make sure to only redraw stuff once. However:
(1) this is only relevant of there's tons of delay and multiple
expose events get sent
(2) we coalesce multiple events into a single expose event anyway
(3) we do this on the frame clock
But most importantly:
(4) Since the invention of compositing, servers caches all contents
anyway
This is an automatic rename of various things related
to the window->surface rename.
Public symbols changed by this is:
GDK_MODE_WINDOW
gdk_device_get_window_at_position
gdk_device_get_window_at_position_double
gdk_device_get_last_event_window
gdk_display_get_monitor_at_window
gdk_drag_context_get_source_window
gdk_drag_context_get_dest_window
gdk_drag_context_get_drag_window
gdk_draw_context_get_window
gdk_drawing_context_get_window
gdk_gl_context_get_window
gdk_synthesize_window_state
gdk_surface_get_window_type
gdk_x11_display_set_window_scale
gsk_renderer_new_for_window
gsk_renderer_get_window
gtk_text_view_buffer_to_window_coords
gtk_tree_view_convert_widget_to_bin_window_coords
gtk_tree_view_convert_tree_to_bin_window_coords
The commands that generated this are:
git sed -f g "GDK window" "GDK surface"
git sed -f g window_impl surface_impl
(cd gdk; git sed -f g impl_window impl_surface)
git sed -f g WINDOW_IMPL SURFACE_IMPL
git sed -f g GDK_MODE_WINDOW GDK_MODE_SURFACE
git sed -f g gdk_draw_context_get_window gdk_draw_context_get_surface
git sed -f g gdk_drawing_context_get_window gdk_drawing_context_get_surface
git sed -f g gdk_gl_context_get_window gdk_gl_context_get_surface
git sed -f g gsk_renderer_get_window gsk_renderer_get_surface
git sed -f g gsk_renderer_new_for_window gsk_renderer_new_for_surface
(cd gdk; git sed -f g window_type surface_type)
git sed -f g gdk_surface_get_window_type gdk_surface_get_surface_type
git sed -f g window_at_position surface_at_position
git sed -f g event_window event_surface
git sed -f g window_coord surface_coord
git sed -f g window_state surface_state
git sed -f g window_cursor surface_cursor
git sed -f g window_scale surface_scale
git sed -f g window_events surface_events
git sed -f g monitor_at_window monitor_at_surface
git sed -f g window_under_pointer surface_under_pointer
(cd gdk; git sed -f g for_window for_surface)
git sed -f g window_anchor surface_anchor
git sed -f g WINDOW_IS_TOPLEVEL SURFACE_IS_TOPLEVEL
git sed -f g native_window native_surface
git sed -f g source_window source_surface
git sed -f g dest_window dest_surface
git sed -f g drag_window drag_surface
git sed -f g input_window input_surface
git checkout NEWS* po-properties po docs/reference/gtk/migrating-3to4.xml
Rename all *window.[ch] source files.
This is an automatic operation, done by the following commands:
for i in $(git ls-files gdk | grep window); do
git mv $i $(echo $i | sed s/window/surface/);
git sed -f g $(basename $i) $(basename $i | sed s/window/surface/) ;
done
git checkout NEWS* po-properties po