If we bind to a global with an higher version than implemented, or
we make requests that appeared in a later version, we would get
fatal wayland errors.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=704104
With the introduction of the use of buffer scaling in ed4fcee4ct we
must request version 3 of the compositor as that is the version of the
surface interface that adds this new functionality. See the following
commit in weston:
commit a85118c1b85df6fbf8f896dca971a5b79a94da71
Author: Jason Ekstrand <jason@jlekstrand.net>
Date: Thu Jun 27 20:17:02 2013 -0500
Use wl_resource_create() for creating resources
This commit sets the version numbers for all added/created objects. The
wl_compositor.create_surface implementation was altered to create a surface
with the same version as the underlying wl_compositor. Since no other
"child interfaces" have version greater than 1, they were all hard-coded to
version 1.
Signed-off-by: Jason Ekstrand <jason@jlekstrand.net>
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=703817
We bind to the newer version of the wl_output which supports
the new done and scale events, and if we use this to get the
scale for each monitor (defaulting to 1 if not supported).
When we call _gdk_wayland_display_load_cursor_theme during
the initial opening of the first display, gdk_setting_get does
not work yet, since it relies on the default display/screen
being set, which only happens after open returns.
Instead, just use the screen of this display.
Instead of maintaining the init refcount in regular event handlers that can
fire in case of hotplug or mode changes, use a dedicated sync callback
to wait for roundtrips.
The global_removal argument is the _name_ of the object.
We were comparing it to the _object id_ of the object.
To fix this, store the name at the time the object is bound.
We use a ref-count mechanism to track whether parts of the init sequence
still needs round trips to receive remaining initial state. Typically
we need a couple of roundtrips total to get the global list, then the
input and output configurations, but with the ref-count we avoid making
global assumptions like that.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=696340
Allows to access Wayland specific window information like wl_surface and
wl_shell_surface.
Add gdk_wayland_window_get_wl_surface for getting the Wayland wl_surface
and gdk_wayland_window_get_wl_shell_surface for getting the Wayland
wl_shell_surface.
In the Wayland backend implementation for gdk_display_get_keymap we enumerate
the known devices and look for an core keyboard device. These device objects
are created when we receive the capabilities for the seat. The seat
capabilities may be received after a request for the keymap so we handle this
by creating a temporary keymap which we then free later when we have the real
one.
Although GDK expects the keymap to be associated with the display under
Wayland this is really associated with the input device so expose this by
finding the first keyboard device.
Signed-off-by: Rob Bradford <rob@linux.intel.com>
This replaces the wl_input_device with wl_pointer, wl_keyboard, wl_touch all
tied together under a wl_seat.
This is quite a radical change in protocol and for now keyboard handling is
disabled.
This requires the SHM object be initialised - therefore this is the most
logical (if slightly ugly place.)
We also need to make sure that we do something clever to load the correct
cursor theme.
The data device manager is a global object that provides the support
infrastructure around data devices. These data device objects are the basis
for handling drag and drop as well as selections in Wayland.
Previously all the commands that acted on the shell took the surface that was
to be acted on as parameter. Now we retrieve an object from the shell that
represents its state for the surface. With that wl_shell_surface object we can
then call methods on that.
Signed-off-by: Kristian Høgsberg <krh@bitplanet.net>