Only update to using v2 headers/structs. The incompatible changes
to tool events are dealt with in the next commit. Pads aren't handled
in this commit either.
Use G_FILE_ATTRIBUTE_FILESYSTEM_REMOTE to detect remote filesystems
instead of hardcoded list of filesystem types.
Bump required GLib version accordingly.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=767965
Debian stable currently ships with a 3.16 kernel, so
it doesn't have memfd available.
This commit adds shm_open fall back code for that case
(for now).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=766341
Use g_drive_is_removable for external drives detection. Current heuristic
fails in some cases (e.g. when removable drive is attached before login),
see Bug 765457.
Bump GLib version accordingly.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=765924
Some compilers we support, such as pre-2013 Visual Studio, does not support
for INIFINITY, log2() and exp2(), so check for exp2() and log2() during
configure, and use fallbacks for them and INIFINTY if they are not found.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=766207
When checking for cairo_win32_surface_create_with_format in -lcairo,
temporarily put CAIRO_LIBS into LIBS so that AC_CHECK_LIB() can
find it in weird places like /usr/local/lib, where gcc would not look
on its own.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=765793
This first adds a common autotools module that can be included by
the Makefile.am's to generate the file lists and the g-ir-scanner/
g-ir-compiler command lines to build the introspection files.
The autotools files for gdk/ and gtk/ are then updated to generate
the full file lists needed to build the introspection files, with
the full command lines for g-ir-scanner and g-ir-compiler as NMake
Makefile modules that can be used to build the introspection files
for Visual Studio builds.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=765195
On Visual Studio, unlike MinGW, manifest files are embedded via
including the manifest file as a resource file in the projects, not
via the .rc file. This means that the line in the .rc file that
specifies the manifest file would cause trouble, so that line gets
removed when the full gtk3-win32.rc is generated on Visual Studio builds,
otherwise 2010+ Visual Studio will complain when compiling the .rc file.
Also, the inclusion of winuser.h will cause warnings during the
compilation of the .rc file.
Fix this by isolating the Win32 resource portions of gtk-win32.rc.in to
gtk-win32.rc.body.in and:
-On MinGW, construct the full gtk-win32.rc by doing the winver.h and
winuser.h inclusion first, then append the contents of gtk-win32.rc.body,
and then appending the line to embed the manifest file.
-On Visual Studio, simply copy the gtk-win32.rc.body to gtk-win32.rc,
and generate the full libgtk3.manifest file.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=762311
The font features demo started calling the Harfbuzz API directly
starting from commit 9de3b24c20. Harfbuzz
is an implicit dependency of Pango on some platforms, but it's not part
of the public dependencies; this means that we cannot expect to link to
Pango and automatically get Harfbuzz symbols to link against —
especially when things like --as-needed are in play.
This change triggered build failures on non-Unix platforms, fixed by
commit 2a9967731a, as well as build
failures in Continuous, with this error message:
/usr/lib/gcc/x86_64-gnomeostree-linux/4.9.3/../../../../x86_64-gnomeostree-linux/bin/ld:
font_features.o: undefined reference to symbol 'hb_tag_to_string'
//lib/libharfbuzz.so.0: error adding symbols: DSO missing from command
line
collect2: error: ld returned 1 exit status
In order to get the font features demo to build everywhere we should
take an explicit, though optional, check on Harfbuzz, and conditionally
build the font features demo with the right compiler and linker flags.
This uses the same function for dumping CSS nodes and styles
as the CSS node test. It can be used to test aspects of inheritance
and matching, as well as initial values.
No actual tests yet.
Instead of having our own copy of the pointer gestures XML file, use
the one installed by wayland-protocols.
Since pointer gestures is an unstable protocol, it went through the
unstable protocol naming convention changes, which is reflected in this
commit.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=758634
GTK cannot depend on libcanberra-gtk which depends on GTK. This causes
a circular dependency and is especially neat if installed GTK is
different enough from uninstalled GTK.
"Add" Visual Studio 2015 projects by what we did before: Copy the Visual
Studio 2010 project files and replace the items in there as needed, as
the formats of the 2010 and 2015 projects are largely the same.
We need to rename the projects so that when these projects are added
into an all-in-one solution file that will build the GTK+ 2/3 stack,
the names of the projects will not collide with the GTK+-2.x ones,
especially as GTK+-2.x and GTK+-3.x are done to co-exist on the same
system. This is due to the case that the MSVC projects are directly
carried over from the GTK+-2.x ones and was then updated for 3.x.
We still need to update the GUIDs of the projects, so that they won't
conflict with the GTK+-2.x ones.
Use a separate G_ENABLE_CONSISTENCY_CHECKS define to guard internal
consistency checks that are applied unconditionally if they are enabled,
such as the widget invariants checking. Interactive debug spew that can
be triggered at runtime with the GTK_DEBUG environment variable is still
guarded by the G_ENABLE_DEBUG define.
The mapping from enable-debug levels to defines is as follows:
yes: G_ENABLE_DEBUG G_ENABLE_CONSISTENCY_CHECKS
minimum: G_ENABLE_DEBUG G_DISABLE_CAST_CHECKS
no: G_DISABLE_CAST_CHECKS G_DISABLE_ASSERT G_DISABLE_CHECKS
GTK+ now uses pango_attr_foreground_alpha_new, pango_attr_background_alpha_new,
PANGO_ATTR_FOREGROUND_ALPHA, PANGO_ATTR_BACKGROUND_ALPHA,
pango_renderer_set_alpha, pango_renderer_get_alpha, which were all added
after 1.37.2.
I invadvertendly introduced a dependency on a recent GLib recently,
by cherry-picking a fix that used new GLib API. This commit will
help catching such errors before release, by using the versioned
deprecation machinery to turn such events into build-time
warnings.
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
It's now needed by gtk-launch, so it's just the case to enable it for all the
builds except the win32 one, instead of adding it for every unix backend.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=744086
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
isatty() on MSYS2 returns non-zero if the fd is stdout and is redirected
to /dev/null. That lets xgettext to produce colorized output and leads
to an assertion failure during terminal type detection.
Although the problem should be fixed in MSYS2, isatty() could behave
wrongly in many ways on Windows. Since gtk+ doesn't need colorized
output, it would be safer to bypass the terminal dependent code.
See also:
https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/bug-gettext/2015-04/msg00004.htmlhttps://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=748346
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
Make it possible to control libcanberra support so we don't risk ending up with
a cyclic dependency when using packages: gtk+ -> libcanberra-gtk3 -> gtk+
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=746904
gtk-update-icon-cache is no longer used at build time, so a lot
of the complicated machinery we have around that (conditional
build, cross build, etc) are no longer required.
It doesn't report -I${prefix}/include in cflags, even if .pc
files explicitly put it there. This was breaking the build
outside of a jhbuild shell when libepoxy is in the jhbuild tree
but not in /usr.
If we want to use OpenGL in GDK then we have two choices; either:
- find the GL headers on each platform
- do extension discovery
- implement all the crazy dlopen()/dlsym() dispatch tables
*or* use libepoxy, which shields us from all this madness and provides a
decent layer for GL clients to use, without creating its own namespace.
Epoxy is also used by other projects, like Xorg and piglit, and it's
portable to all the platforms GDK cares about.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=119189
As a noinst_PROGRAMS, the libtool generated for cross-compiling will be
used, which will mess up the linking. Create a all-local target instead.
Also ensure that building uses always a native version of the tool by
specifying a GTK_UPDATE_ICON_CACHE automake variable.
Finally "config.h" has been created to work for the target platform and
causes problem when cross-compiling. So we temporarily generate a basic
config.h which contains only the strict minimum.
Make the Visual C++-related build files contain the actual GTK+ version, by
generating them during the configure stage and dist'ing them in the release
tarballs. This is especially important for builds of introspection files,
as one may need to look at the release version of GTK+ in those files.
For that to happen the libgtk3 is embedded with a manifest that requests
common controls library 6.x, and GTK lazily calls InitCommonControlsEx()
to initialize those. Then this manifest is used to temporarily override
the process activation contest when loading comdlg32 (which contains the
code for the print dialog), ensuring that it too depends on common
controls 6.x, even if the application that uses GTK does not.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=733773
This adds a new test which can be scripted to trigger various
event and action sequences, and record state changes in the
accessibility layer.
So far, there are a few tests verifying state changes when
focus changes.
Related to https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=715176
Move bloatpad to ./examples/bp/ so that we can start treating it as more of a
"normal" app instead of just jamming everything into a single .c file.
We don't use the name "bloatpad" for the directory in order not to
create 'git pull' pain with the probably-already-existing executable of
the same name.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=722092
As the Visual Studio 2012/2013 are only slightly different from the Visual
Studio 2010 projects, we can provide support for them by using scripts to
copy the Visual Studio 2010 projects, and update the specific parts as
necessary.
Thus, there would be little maintenance overhead for these as only the 2010
projects need to be kept up-to-date as a result. This might change when we
do get the stack working with WinRT/Metro, but that's going to be another
totally different issue.