GDK has a lock to mark critical sections inside the backends.
Additionally, code that would re-enter into the GTK main loop was
supposed to hold the lock.
Back in the Good Old Days™ this was guaranteed to kind of work only on
the X11 backend, and would cause a neat explosion on any other GDK
backend.
During GTK+ 3.x we deprecated the API to enter and leave the critical
sections, and now we can remove all the internal uses of the lock, since
external API that uses GTK+ 4.x won't be able to hold the GDK lock.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=793124
This state flag is used in several places in GTK+, for example to
ignore RESIZE_INC hints if tiled. Setting it is also necessary for
backwards compatibility with applications that changed their behaviour
when tiled, such as GNOME Terminal and its MATE fork.
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@debian.org>
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=789357
Commit c415bef5de introduced support for the new _GTK_EDGE_CONSTRAINTS
atom. If the compositor supports that atom, however, we were always
setting the tiled state, even if no actual tiling information is
available, where the correct action is to completely remove any traces
of the tiled state.
Fix that by correctly removing the tiled state when compositor supports
_GTK_EDGE_CONSTRAINTS Xatom.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=788516
The query function for cursor sizes and capabilities
are not very interesting. At least, they are not used
in GTK+, and all backends but X11 just hardcode
made-up values anyway. So, lets drop them.
As far as possible, use per-display debug flags.
This will minimize the debug spew that we get from
the inspector if it is running on a separate display.
We now have a GdkX11Display::xevent signal that gets emitted for every
XEvent and allows you to interrupt processing via TRUE/FALSE return
values.
These return values to correspond to GDK_FILTER_REMOVE and
GDK_FILTER_CONTINUE respectively.
The GDK_FILTER_TRANSLATE case from gdk_window_add_filter() is now meant
to be handled via gdk_display_put_event().
(1) Turn X11 clipboard event handling into a regular filter function
(2) Maintain a timestamp in the clipboard, so we can pass it when
querying selections.
Instead, turn the functions into backend API:
gdk_broadway_display_add_selection_targets()
gdk_broadway_display_clear_selection_targets()
Remove the old per-backend functions, too.
The preferred api to create cursors is by name, and the
GdkCursorType enumeration can directly trace its ancestry
to the horrible X cursor font. So lets stop using it.
gdk_display_get_default_screen is gone, but we still
have x11-specific screen apis that GTK+ is using, so
we need an alterative way to get the screen object.