If the other peer requests data too fast (too rare/unlikely though),
we might receive multiple gdk_wayland_selection_request_target() calls
with no ending gdk_wayland_selection_check_write(), in which case the
fd is leaked as no GOutputStream was created to take over it.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=751414
We weren't catching all the places where the AsyncWriteData operation
should be cancelled, which could happen if we repeatedly request the
same target on different fds.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=751414
At the moment we create the AsyncWriteData, the ownership of the
fd is granted to the GOutputStream, and the fd set to -1, so at
this moment we're just silently getting EBADFD.
This partially reverts 25885ca600, the initialization of .fd
to -1 is valid and stays though.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=751414
On X11 this is something the windowing system does for us, which the
wayland backend should emulate, being grabs completely client-side.
So, if the grab and current focus windows differ, make sure we emit
focus/crossing events as it corresponds to the grab device.
This was being done so only on pointers. Internally, a GdkDeviceGrabInfo
is kept for each of the master pointer/keyboard, failing to do this for
keyboards results in a stuck keyboard grab.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=748892
The fd must be closed on async_write_data_free(), but we should also
initialize it to -1 so gdk_wayland_selection_check_write() doesn't wrongly
pick the stdin fd.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=751414
A subsurface positioning operation only takes effect when the parent
surfaces state is applied. If a subsurface is mapped and positioned, but
the parent surface state is not immediately committed, the relative
position of the subsurface is undefined and may be placed incorrectly.
To avoid this undefined state, always request that the parent surface
should be committed after mapping a subsurface so that the position
operation will take effect.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=751098
Background patterns are often updated when style changes. In many cases,
the new pattern will match the previous. We can optimize out the
invalidation that will occur upon resetting the same pattern.
An pass_through window is something you can draw in but does not
affect event handling. Normally if a window has with no event mask set
for a particular event then input events in it go to its parent window
(X11 semantics), whereas if pass_through is enabled the window below
the window will get the event. The later mode is useful when the
window is partially transparent. Note that an pass-through windows can
have child windows that are not pass-through so they can still get events
on some parts.
Semantically, this behaves the same as an regular window with
gdk_window_set_child_input_shapes() called on it (and re-called any
time a child is changed), but its far more efficient and easy to use.
This allows us to fix the testoverlay input stacking test.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=750568https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=90917
If a menu was not attached to any widget, we try to calculate its
position given where the grabbed pointer is and what window has its
focus. Previously we failed to do so if a "transfer window" was used
for the grab, and this patch adds a code path that, if the menu window
itself didn't have the grab, look for the transfer window and get the
grab device from there.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=748951
If a position was already explicitly set, don't try to guess the
position of popup menus by looking at the pointer position, just use
the set coordinates.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=748951
According to the xdg-shell protocol specification the (x, y) coordinates
passed when creating a popup surface is relative to top left corner of
the parent surface, but prior to this patch, if the parent surface
was an xdg_surface, we'd position it relative to top left corner of the
window geometry of that xdg_surface.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=749717
On wl_keyboard.key/modifiers, we're just forgetting about currently
pressed mouse buttons. Fix this by storing button and key modifiers
separately, and put these together when creating the GdkEvents.
This patch introduces support for using the newly introduced
monitor objects in the XRandR protocol. These objects are meant
to be used to denote a set of rectangles representing a logical
monitor, and are used to hide details like monitor tiling and
virtual gpu outputs.
This uses the new objects instead of crtc/outputs objects when
they are available to create the monitor lists. X server 1.18
is required on the server side for randr 1.5.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=749561
Load themed cursors from the same places they are loaded on freedesktop systems,
but use W32 API functions to do so (works for .cur/.ani cursors instead of X
cursors).
Refactor the code for cursor handling. Prefer loading cursors by name.
Do not load actual cursors when loading the theme. Find the files and remember
the arguments/calls for loading them instead. Keeping HCURSOR instance in the
hashmap would result in multiple GdkCursors using the same HCURSOR. Given that
we use DestroyCursor() to off them, this would cause problems (at the very
least - DestroyCursor() would fail).
Store GdkCursor instances in a cache. Update cached cursors when theme changes.
Recognize "system" theme as a special (and default) case. When it is set,
prefer system cursors and fall back to Adwaita cursors and (as a last resort)
built-in X cursors. Otherwise prefer theme cursors and fall back to system and
X cursors.
Force GTK to use "left_ptr" cursor when no cursor is set. Using NULL makes
it use the system default "arrow", which is not the intended behaviour when
a non-system theme is selected.
Ignore cursor size setting and query the OS for the required cursor size, as
Windows (almost) does not allow setting cursors of arbitrary size.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=749287
In particular this means that cursors are disposed of by the way of
g_object_unref(), not DestroyCursor (which is documented to not to be
used on certain kinds of cursors, and we can't tell which is which).
It should also alleviate any concerns about destroying cursors that
are still in use by other windows, except for cases where we would
somehow get our hands on a HCURSOR that someone else is using and we
make a GdkCursor out of it and later unref and finalize it while it
is still in use.
It also removes the need to call CopyCursor(), which makes animated
cursors into non-animated ones as a side-effect (supposed to be a bug,
but try explaining that to MS). Now cursors should be animated (if
the are set up as such in the OS).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=697477
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
Only "wait" and "all-scroll" are not implemented properly. OS X does not
seem to have a proper interface to either cursor. Approximations are used
instead; see the code.
See bug 749178.
The ordering of globals in connection setup under weston
is different from mutter, and we end up creating a the
dnd window before any outputs are present. Don't cause
a critical warning in that case.
Even when the program itself calls gdk_set_program_class(). There's
currently no way for this function to be called without breaking gdk's
--class command line option, because you cannot call it before
gtk_init().
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=747634
This is purely to support gdk_cursor_new_from_name().
In particular, its counterpart, gdk_cursor_new_for_display(), will not
be affected, because there's no GDK_LEFT_PTR_WATCH cursor type,
and because i don't have a fallback cursor bitmask for gdk/win32/xcursors.h
We interpret buttons 4-7 as old-school scroll events, so it does
not make sense to add these to the mask. Also fix an off-by-one
in the loop here, buttons_mask is 1-based.
We now have proper checks for gdk_screen_is_composited() and a proper
implementation for gdk_screen_get_rgba_visual() for Windows, so we
can remove the comments in this file stating that they aren't
available for Windows.
I was getting really weird values for scale for the blank cursor used
when hiding the cursor in a GtkEntry when typing, this was caused
by gdk_wayland_device_update_window_cursor sending random values
when the returned buffer was NULL.
We fix this by just not sending any buffer or scale updates in this
case.
Requires Vista and newer.
* Create surfaces with cairo_win32_surface_create_with_format
* Provide an rgba visual that can be distinguished from the system visual
* Make rgba visual the best available visual
* Enable alpha-transparency for all windows that we control
* Check for appropriate cairo capabilities at configure time
(W32 - 1.14.3 newer than 2015-04-14; others - 1.14.0)
* Check for composition support before enabling CSDs
* Re-enable transparency on WM_DWMCOMPOSITIONCHANGED
Windows that were created while composition was enabled and that were CSDed
as a result and will look ugly (thick black borders or no borders at all) once
composition is disabled.
If composition is enabled afterwards, they will return back to normal.
This happens, for example, when RDP session is opened to a desktop where a GTK
application is running. For W7/Vista windows will only re-gain transparency after
the RDP session is closed. For W8 transparency will only be gone momentarily.
Windows that were created while composition was disabled will not be CSDed
automatically and will use SSD (WM decorations), while windows that are CSDed
manually will get a thin square border.
If composition is enabled afterwards, these windows will not change.
This is most noticeable for system menus (popup menus are often generated
on the fly, system menus are created once) and some dialogues (About dialogue,
for example).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=727316
GdkKeymap already has support for _get_num_lock_state() and
_get_caps_lock_state(). Adding _get_scroll_lock_state() would be good
for completness and some backends (Windows?) could take advantage of
this.
Add two new requests to the gtk_surface interface: set_modal and
unset_modal. The server will currently not do anything special with
input focus, and its up to the client to ignore events on the parent
surface.
This commit bumps the gtk_shell interface version to 2. By connecting to
a Wayland server with another gtk_shell interface version any features
depending on the gtk_shell protocol will not be available.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=745721
cairo_rectangle_int_t was replaced by GdkRectangle in commit
552c29b488, but the type of the pointing-to
property was not changed.
To avoid breaking old code that sets or gets the property with a GValue
of type CAIRO_GOBJECT_TYPE_RECTANGLE_INT, transformation functions between
CAIRO_GOBJECT_TYPE_RECTANGLE_INT and GDK_TYPE_RECTANGLE are registered on
the first call to gdk_rectangle_get_type().
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=723394
gdk_wayland_drop_context_set_status() can't do much else currently besides
picking a mimetype (the first one is currently chosen). This may incorrectly
unset the mimetype chosen on .receive(), so the transfer is cancelled before
it even starts.
At the time drop_reply happens, we should have already picked a mimetype
along the way, so only cover for accepted=FALSE in order to unset it.
During drag operations from another client, we currently set no window as
the DnD source. There's paths in upper layers though that rely on it being
set, just that we don't trigger these yet.
This reverts commit 24d3f3fcb2.
Sorry, I am going to re-commit this very shortly with a new
commit message, as I found the commit message to be quite
wrong and misleading.
The current GdkScreen->is_composited() is a stub as we were having Windows
XP being supported, which does not support Desktop Window Manager (DWM),
which is used by Windows for composition.
Windows Vista and later support DWM, and it is always enabled on Windows 8/
Server 2012 and later.
Please note that as we are dropping XP support in this cycle, this is the
commit that would say goodbye to Windows XP support for GTK+-3.x, by
linking directly to dwmapi.dll. This means, we only check whether we are
on Windows 8 or Server 2012 (or later) to see whether we unconditionally
have composition enabled.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=741849
XSetWindowBackgroundPixmap() will throw BadMatch only in the case of a
different parent window depth. Different visuals are fine and actually
expected in Gtk+ 3.16 (since we don't stick to the system default visual
but try to pick a better one).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=747524
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
The "app_id" of a xdg_surface should be the ID that can potentially be
used to get the DBUS name or the .desktop file.
For GtkApplication programs this is often the ID passed when creating the
GtkApplication object, so when available lets use that.
As fallbacks, first try g_get_prgname as it often corresponds to the
basename part of the .dektop file for non-GtkApplication programs.
Otherwise use gdk_get_program_class, even though that string usually
doesn't conform to the expectations of xdg_surface.set_application_id.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=746435
If the GLX_EXT_texture_from_pixmap extension is not available when we
did the extensions check, then there's no point in using the backend
specific code paths that rely on it.
Use screen workarea to *also* set the position of a maximized window,
not just its size. Without this the window position defaults to 0:0
(the topleft corner), which is wrong when taskbar is position along the
top or left edge of the screen.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=746821
During copy/paste, it may be common that we receive several property changes
around the selection atom, this results in warnings when cancelling the previous
write attempt. We already honor the last request properly, so we should just
cancel silently.
The wl_data_source may be the clipboard's. Looking up the drag context in
order to get the display isn't going to fare well there. So, just use the
default display, and only look up the drag context when we know we need it.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=746386
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 setting of the the surface scale even when the surface is not
created from a surface was introduced due to a crash when getting the
buffers when dividing by the scale. The only reason I can see this is
that we get the buffer from a non-existing surface when the wl_cursor
has not yet been set.
Instead, use the name field to avoid trying to use the non-existing
surface, effectively avoiding the division-by-zero that way.
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
gdk_window_ensure_native() can end up with a NULL parent pointer, which
it passes to find_native_parent_above()…but that expects a non-NULL
parent.
Found with scan-build.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=712760
When configuring Gtk+ with --disable-xkb, the build fails because of an
undefined reference to get_xkb().
This patch fixes this issue.
Signed-off-by: Eric Le Bihan <eric.le.bihan.dev@free.fr>
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=739070
If the user requests a version less than 3.2 the version is forced to 3.2.
Previous checking code have an inconsistent behavior depending on which
minor version number was specified. This is avoided now by temporarily
converting the major/minor pair into a single integer.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=744288
And use these for the missing axes if the valuator mask is incomplete.
This used to work fine on tablets because the Wacom driver ensures all
valuators are sent, which is not true if using the evdev driver.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=703610
When a window is hidden, its surface and all its roles are destroyed,
if this happens when we already issued a wl_surface_commit and are
awaiting for a frame callback, the clock will remain frozen for the
next time the window is shown.
To avoid this, keep track of the wl_surface_frame() calls issued,
and ensure the clock is thawed after hiding. If we happen to receive
the frame callback, it is just ignored.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=743427
We were just throwing the request away if the app asks to
fullscreen or maximize a window before it has been mapped.
This is something the GdkWindow API explicitly supports,
so make it work by saving the state until the surface exists.
This fixes things under weston. There are bugs in mutter
that keep this from working correctly with gnome-shell.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=745303
When the Wayland compositor vanishes, all applications connected will
receive a SIGPIPE as soon as they try to use wl_display_dispatch().
Do not use g_error() to terminate the applications when this occurs,
g_error() means an error in the application while here it's not truly
the case.
Use g_warning() and exit() instead.
Signed-off-by: Olivier Fourdan <ofourdan@redhat.com>
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=745289
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
In order to support window scales for EGL windows, resize the
wl_egl_window to the window dimension multiplied with the window scale,
just as with SHM window buffers.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=745076
When the preferred surface scale changes, for example when entering a
wl_output with a higher scale than any previous entered output, recreate
the shm surface and redraw the window content with the new window scale.
Before this patch, the internal scale would be changed, but the shm
surface would not be recreated given the new scale, i.e. we'd attach a
buffer for a different scale than wl_surface.set_scale specified.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=745076
If the compositor is too old for handling surface buffer scales, never
tyr to set change it. This will effectively always leave it to its
initial state, i.e. 1.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=745076
Don't try to paint onto an error surface. This happens for example when
gdk_cairo_set_source_pixbuf() is called with a pixbuf that is too big
for Cairo to handle.
Spotted by Christian Boxdörfer
First, attributes can be NULL (which is always the case when calling
gdk_window_ensure_native) so do not unconditionally dereference it.
Then the window_type should be taken directly from the GdkWindow as
in other backends (such as the X11 one for example).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=744942
Also try and clarify a few things about event propagation. Move
input-handling.xml into gtk-doc’s expand_content_files variable so it
automatically links to widget documentation. Add links from
gtk_widget_add_events() and friends to the new documentation.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=744054
It will be useless to check the source window on the destination side,
it's at the moment always NULL. Fetch the display from the device instead,
which will be set for every GdkDragContext.
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
The existence of OpenGL implementations that do not provide the full
core profile compatibility because of reasons beyond the technical, like
llvmpipe not implementing floating point buffers, makes the existence of
GdkGLProfile and documenting the fact that we use core profiles a bit
harder.
Since we do not have any existing profile except the default, we can
remove the GdkGLProfile and its related API from GDK and GTK+, and sweep
the whole thing under the carpet, while we wait for an extension that
lets us ask for the most compatible profile possible.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=744407
Store the OpenGL version when we first do the extensions check; this
allows client code to check the available GL version without requiring a
call to gdk_gl_context_make_current() and epoxy_gl_version().
When using GDK_GL_PROFILE_3_2_CORE, we are not only specifying that the
GDK should create a core profile; we are also specifying that the
minimum required version of OpenGL is set to 3.2.
We should also specify that the GDK_GL_PROFILE_DEFAULT profile is an
alias for GDK_GL_PROFILE_3_2_CORE.
Now that we have a two-stages GL context creation sequence, we can move
the profile to a pre-realize option, like the debug and forward
compatibility bits, or the GL version to use.