Some Windows keymaps have bogus mappings for the Ctrl modifier. !4423 attempted
to fix this by ignoring the Ctrl layer, but that was not enough. We also need to
ignore combinations of Ctrl with other modifiers, i.e. Ctrl + Shift. For example,
Ctrl + Shift + 6 is mapped to the character 0x1E on a US keyboard (but it should
be treated as Ctrl + ^). Basically, always ignore Ctrl unless it is used in
conjunction with Alt, i.e. as part of AltGr.
Related issue: #4667
If any of the APIs that assumes that the entry is set already is used
before having one already set, things break pretty badly.
Fixes a downstream issue reported at https://github.com/gtk-rs/gtk4-rs/issues/873
`free` is defined in `stdlib.h`, see for example
<https://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/009604499/functions/free.html>. Without
this include compilation can fail with the following error:
```
../gdk/loaders/gdkjpeg.c: In function ‘gdk_save_jpeg’:
../gdk/loaders/gdkjpeg.c:264:7: warning: implicit declaration of function ‘free’ [-Wimplicit-function-declaration]
free (data);
^
../gdk/loaders/gdkjpeg.c:264:7: warning: incompatible implicit declaration of built-in function ‘free’
../gdk/loaders/gdkjpeg.c:264:7: note: include ‘<stdlib.h>’ or provide a declaration of ‘free’
../gdk/loaders/gdkjpeg.c:302:67: error: ‘free’ undeclared (first use in this function)
return g_bytes_new_with_free_func (data, size, (GDestroyNotify) free, NULL);
^
../gdk/loaders/gdkjpeg.c:302:67: note: each undeclared identifier is reported only once for each function it appears in
../gdk/loaders/gdkjpeg.c:303:1: warning: control reaches end of non-void function [-Wreturn-type]
}
^
```
We don't want to risk having something really weird come out if we have a
WCG colorspace, so instead only do the performance hack on systems where
the output is likely reasonable.
We will want to eventually just be drawing in the appropriate colorspace,
but that is not available yet.
When using software rendering w/ cairo, assume we're drawing in
the best-monitor's colorspace rather than RGB to avoid colorspace
conversions on every frame.
Instead of relying on cairo_t to perform drawing from our backing
image surface to the Core Graphics context, we can convert the
cairo_image_surface_t into a CGImageRef without having to copy
data if we are certain of the alignment of the image up front.
Without this, there are many situations, based on the size of the
window that could cause cairo to take a slow path and malloc/copy
the data to ensure that alignment.
The previous commit titled "macos: align image surface rowstride to
16-bytes" ensures that this invariant is true so that our drawing
code can assume we can reference the framebuffer from the
cairo_image_surface_t using a CGDataProvider.
Since GdkMacosCairoContext and GdkMacosCairoSubview are coordinating,
we can also setup the transformation/scale early when drawing the
cairo_image_surface_t instead of when copying it to Core Graphics.
Furthermore, the CGImageRef is created with an RGB colorspace so
that we are not performing colorspace conversion to the output
device. We don't get color matching between displays, but we don't
expect that anyway, particularly with the software renderer.
When creating a cairo_image_surface_t we want both the framebuffer pointer
and each row to be aligned to 16-bytes so that Core Graphics will use more
optimal paths.
However, cairo_image_surface_create() will not guarantee that the rowstride
is aligned to 16-bytes so we must do that ourselves.
We need to avoid conflating the managing of frame callbacks from
the freeze/thaw mechanics and ensure we don't perform extra thaw
requests at the wrong time.