This patch makes that work using 1 of 2 options:
1. Add all missing enums to the switch statement
or
2. Cast the switch argument to a uint to avoid having to do that (mostly
for GdkEventType).
I even found a bug while doing that: clearing a GtkImage with a surface
did not notify thae surface property.
The reason for enabling this flag even though it is tedious at times is
that it is very useful when adding values to an enum, because it makes
GTK immediately warn about all the switch statements where this enum is
relevant.
And I expect changes to enums to be frequent during the GTK4 development
cycle.
-Wint-conversion is important because it checks casts from ints to
pointers.
-Wdiscarded-qualifiers is important to catch cases where we don't
strings when we should.
The behavior where a touchpoint takes over the pointer position is
really backend dependent. Since this went away from the generic code,
implement it here.
Instead of relying on special values of edge constraints, this
patch adds an internal-only gdk_window_supports_edge_constraints()
function that by default returns FALSE, and is implemented by
GdkWindowWayland and GdkWindowX11.
This way, we can properly detect server-side support for this
feature and adapt accordingly.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=783669
Following the previous patch, where edge constraints support
was added to the Wayland backend, this patch introduces the
necessary code to handle the _GTK_EDGE_CONSTRAINTS atom from
X11 backend.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=783669
Under X, we were not setting the right drag cursor initially,
because at current_action == action == 0, initially. Fix this
by explicitly using the right cursor when grabbing.
This property contains 5 integers, of which the last 2 respectively
contain the tool serial number and tool ID. We were only extracting the
first so far, but GdkDeviceTool also has API getters for the latter,
which remained 0.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=786400
Interpret NULL as "root window" here - we only have one
screen nowadays, so there is no choice involved, and this
will let us avoid dealing with the root window in the
fontend code.
Don't set the have_focused field of the window's toplevel to TRUE by
default and don't set the FOCUSED state in gdk_window_map. This a means
toplevel window's state is what the WM expects, and the FOCUSED state
will be set anyway when we map the window and receive a _NET_WM_STATE
message.
Wacom tablets often have a "pad" device which houses multiple buttons. At
present, these devices are incorrectly marked as GDK_SOURCE_PEN which can
cause problems for some software.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=782040
The common compiler and linker flags control, among other things, the
default visibility of symbols; without them, we leak symbols that ought
to be private.
We're mixing a lot of styles in the Meson build files. This is an
attempt at making everything slightly more consistent in terms of
whitespace and indentation.
This is how it's done in the autotools build. Also avoids problems
with multiple source files having the same name (gdkeventsource.c).
Also move broadway backend code into broadway subdir.
Otherwise we wait for the next gdk_drag_motion() call, which will
happen on the next motion event, making the drag window briefly visible
on the 0,0 root coordinates.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=778203
The Mesa Vulkan drivers need XInitThreads() being called, because their
implementation has to use threads.
And I don't want to make the call depend on if Vulkan is compiled in
because that makes GTK's X11 behavior depend on compile-time flags, so
it's always called.
We're not currently using this, and dropping it allows us to loose
a bunch of code which leads us towards the goal of having GdkWindow
only for toplevels (and reparenting makes not sense for toplevels).
We can't really support these on e.g. wayland anyway, and we're trying
to get rid of subwindow at totally in the long term, so lets drop this.
It allows us to drop a lot of complexity.
Instead, complain if somebody calls gdk_x11_window_get_xid() on a
non-native window.
We cannot make random windows native anymore because there's no GSK
renderer associated with them, so we cannot draw them.
gdk_window_create_vulkan_context() now exists and will return a Vulkan
context for the given window. It even initializes the surface. But it
doesn't do anything useful yet.
Adds the gdk_display_ref_vulkan() and gdk_display_unref_vulkan()
functions which setup/tear down VUlkan support for the display.
Nothing is using those functions yet.
This is a way to query the damaged area of the backbuffer.
The GL renderer uses this to compute the extents of that damage region
(computed via buffer age) and use them to minimize the area to redraw.
This changes the semantics of GL rendering to "When calling
gdk_window_begin_frame() with a GL context, the area by
gdk_gl_context_get_damage() needs to be redrawn and every other pixel of
the backbuffer is guaranteed to be correct.
After gdk_window_end_frame() on a GL-drawn window, the whole backbuffer
must be correct.
We can always glXBufferSwap() now because of this.
... instead of a gl context.
This requires some refactoring in the way we mark the shared context as
drawing: We now call begin_frame/end_frame() on it and ignore the call
on the main context.
Unfortunately we need to do this check in all vfuncs, which sucks. But I
haven't found a better way.
This way, we can query the GL context's state via
gdk_gl_context_is_drawing().
Use this function to make GL contexts as attached and grant them access
to the front/backbuffer for rendering.
All of this is still unused because GL drawing is still disabled.
No visible changes as GL rendering is disabled at the moment.
What was done:
1. Move window->invalidate_for_new_frame to glcontext->begin_frame
This moves the code to where it is used (the GLContext) and prepares it
for being called where it is used when actually beginning to draw the
frame.
2. Get rid of buffer-age usage
We want to let the application render directly to the backbuffer.
Because of that, we cannot make any assumptions about the contents the
application renders outside the clip area.
In particular GskGLRenderer renders random stuff there but not actual
contents.
3. Pass the actual GL context
Previously, we passed the shared context to end_frame, now we pass the
actual GL context that the application uses for rendering. This is so
that the vfuncs could prepare the actual contexts for rendering (they
don't currently).
4. Simplify the code
The previous code set up the final drawing method in begin_frame.
Instead, we now just ensure the clip area is something we can render
and decide on the actual method in end_frame.
This is both more robust (we can change the clip area in between if we
want to) and less code.
This way we can recommend that applications use the
fullscreen_on_monitor() API on both X and Wayland otherwise they'd
have to keep a path for each backend to achieve this functionality.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=773857
Switch code to use gdk_display_is_composited() instead.
The new code also doesn't use a vfunc to query the property but rather
requires the backend to call set_composited()/set_rgba() to change the
value.
These complicate a lot of GdkWindow internals to implement features
that not a lot of apps use, and will be better achieved using gsk.
So, we just drop it all.
And with it, gtk_widget_get_visual() and gtk_widget_set_visual() are
gone.
We now always use the RGBA visual (if available) and otherwise fall back
to the system visual.
X11 was the only backend to support it and people can just override it
using XSetClassHint() directly.
The docs already advertised the function as "Do not use".
Keep the existing call to XSetClassHint() in place, so that we keep
setting the same values as in GTK3.
... and gdk_screen_get_window_stack().
Those functions were originally added in
5afb4f0f11 but do not seem to be used as
they are not implemented anywhere but in X.
As GDK is not meant to fulfill window management functionality I'm going
to remove these functions without replacements.
... and gdk_screen_get_width_mm() and gdk_screen_get_height_mm() and
the shortcut counterparts that call these functions on the default
screen.
Modern display servers don't provide an ability to query the size of a
screen or display so we shouldn't allow that either.
RandR 1.5 is enabled on VirtualBox guest of Fedora 25 but
XRROutputInfo->name is "default". If init_randr15() does not
return TRUE, the monitor size sets 0 because gdk_screen_get_width()
returns 0.
This problem causes GtkStatusIcon not to show the activate menu.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=771033
There was a return between a push/pop of an error trap, and
this managed to trigger the 'unpopped trap' warning in the
displayclose test now. Fix this.
The GdkDragContext should only listen to GDK_GRAB_BROKEN events sent to
its own pointer device. It turns out that the passive key grabs mistake
GDK into sending a GdkEventGrabBroken on the master keyboard, which the
DnD machinery mistakes as a signal to cancel the operation.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=766442
The active keyboard grab can be spared then. This way the passive
key grabs allow other key combinations (eg. alt-tab) that are not
mandatory to grab here.
Always associate a drag context with a GdkDisplay and use that when
getting a cursor for a given action.
If we don't do this, dragging on a window that doesn't use the default
display will make us use cursors from the wrong display.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=765565
This allows us to decide when the R and B color channels should be
flipped with a much better granularity.
For instance, when using GLX_EXT_texture_from_pixmap to create a GL
texture from a surface we don't need to swap the R and B channels, as
the internal representation of the texture data will already have the
appropriate colors.
We also don't need to flip color channels when blitting from a texture.
Windows save in hardware_keycode an information which is not so low
level and some application require the hardware scancode.
As Windows provides this information save it in GdkEventPrivate
and provide a function to get this information.
For no Windows system the function return the hardware_keycode instead.
Signed-off-by: Frediano Ziglio <fziglio@redhat.com>
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=765259
Because there are multiple different types of styluses that can be used with
tablets, we have to have some sort of identifier for them attached to the
GdkDeviceTool, especially since knowing the actual tool type for a GdkDeviceTool
is necessary for matching up a GdkDeviceTool with it's appropriate
GdkInputSource in Wayland (eg. matching up a GdkDeviceTool eraser with the
GDK_SOURCE_ERASER GdkInputSource of a wayland tablet).
Signed-off-by: Stephen Chandler Paul <thatslyude@gmail.com>
We were just relying on the drag context finalize() to destroy
the window. But with garbage-collected bindings, that might
not happen as soon as we like, so explicitly hide the window
when the drag ends successfully.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=763659
The virtual host assigns the name of the mouse device to
"VirtualBox USB Tablet" in VirtualBox and we'd use that device as mouse.
If not, GtkTooltip is not enabled.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=763017
Fixes bug 763023: in certain circumstances, XRRGetOutputInfo will return
a null pointer. This commit adds a check to detect and handle this
return value.
gdk_display_list_devices is deprecated and all the backends
implement the same fallback by delegating to the device manager
and caching the list (caching it is needed since the method does
not transfer ownership of the container).
The compat code can be shared among all backends and we can
initialize the list lazily only in the case someone calls the
deprecated method.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=762891
The g_print documentation explicitly says not to do this, since
g_print is meant to be redirected by applications. Instead use
g_message for logging that can be triggered via GTK_DEBUG.
Sigh.
Now that we've neutered the QEMU USB tablet, I'm finding that
spice is doing just the same nonsense. It has a fake "spice vdagent
tablet". Blacklist that as well.
The significant change here is a memory leak fix in init_xrandr15.
The rest of the changes makes init_xrandr13 and init_xrandr15 more
parallel, and simplifies init_multihead.
We should conform to a minimal set of reasons for the gtk side to emit
a better GtkDragResult than GTK_DRAG_RESULT_ERROR. This fixes the notebook
tab DnD feature, where we rely on GTK_DRAG_RESULT_NO_TARGET.
In the wayland side, unfortunately we can't honor either NO_TARGET nor
USER_CANCELLED, we don't know of the latter, so we could return false
positives on the former.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=761954
The fallback behaviour of get_work_area () divides the
screen width and height by the window scaling factor, but
those values are already scaled down.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=761474
Set _GTK_THEME_VARIANT to empty string when default theme variant
is used. This will allow to understand whether _GTK_THEME_VARIANT
is not supported or default variant is requested.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=761476
Presently, Gtk will only send a startup notification completion message
for the first window that is shown. This is not good for the case of
GtkApplication, where we are expected to participate in
startup-notification for all windows.
We have avoided this problem by manually emitting the startup complete
message from after_emit in GtkApplication.
Unfortunately, this causes problems for windows that are shown with a
delay. It is also a dirty hack.
The reason for the original behaviour is simple: there is a static
boolean in gtkwindow.c which controls it. We remove this.
Instead, clear the startup notification ID stored in GDK when sending
the completion message. GtkApplication will re-set this the next time
an event comes in which needs startup-notification handling. In the
non-GtkApplication case, newly shown windows will still not send the
message, since the cookie will have been cleared.
Finally, we remove the hack from GtkApplication's after_emit.
This will probably cause some regressions in terms of lingering startup
notification messages. The correct solution here is to always use
gtk_window_present(), including when merely opening a new document (with
a new tab, for example).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=690791
This includes managing input events and source-side DND events,
as well as setting the appropriate cursor and emitting the signals
that are expected in this mode of operation.
We are getting the mime data destroy notify called when we
destroy the surface in finalize. Trying to set the XSync counters
at this time is a) pointless and b) yielding an X error because
the counters have already been destroyed.
To avoid this, unhook the damage tracking before destroying
the surface.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=760188
We are setting mime data with a destroy notify on the cairo
surface to get notified when cairo registers damage for the
surface (in that case, it clears the mime data, calling the
destroy notify). Unfortunately, the destroy notify is also
called when we remove the mime data ourselves, which was
not intentional.
Use a flag in the window impl struct to ignore the callback
when we are clearing the hook.
Instead of creating an intermediate pixbuf, just render
the window surface onto the new surface. Doing things this
way lets us avoid the cairo_surface_mark_dirty() call in
gdk_pixbuf_get_from_window(), which is not generally safe
to call on 'random' surfaces - it asserts that the surface
has no mime data attached, and the X11 backend uses mime
data for damage tracking purposes...
We destroy the widget that is wrapped around the drag window
when the object data on the drag context gets cleared. Destroying
the window before that happens leads to unpleasantries. E.g. we may
try to access the frame clock, which doesn't exist anymore, and
things go downhill from there. So, keep the window alive for
a little longer.
Always returning a left_ptr if we can't find anything better
broke firefox application-specific fallback for missing cursors.
Keep that working by only doing the fallback for the CSS cursor
names, not for things like hashes.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=760141
Showing the drag cancel animation can be done in the X11
drag context implementation now that we hold the drag
window there, and have the start coordinates.
Since we can't control if and when the application destroys
the drag widget, we take a snapshot of the window contents
and display that during the animation. This should be good
enough for all practical purposes.
Add a variant of gdk_drag_begin that takes the start position
in addition to the device. All backend implementation have been
updated to accept (and ignore) the new arguments.
Subsequent commits will make use of the data in some backends.
Commit 1266d15c4 also broke Xwayland, as it does the same trick
than VMWare pointers. Let's extend the heuristic to check for "pointer"
in the device name, what can possibly go wrong...
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=757358
We currently just look for a master device with input source MOUSE.
After recent changes to the way input devices are classified, xwayland
on my system comes up with a virtual core pointer that has input
source TOUCHSCREEN. This was causing assertion failures. Be a little
more careful and accept a touchscreen as core pointer, if there is
no mouse.
VMWare seems to create mouse devices with abs axes which confuses
our detection of single-touch touchscreens. Those have though a
name we can match on ("VirtualPS/2 VMware VMMouse"), it should
be pretty safe to assume that no real touchscreens have "mouse"
in their name...
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=757358
Those won't have ABS_MT_* axes, so won't be reported has having
XITouchClassInfo. Fallback on these to checking whether abs x/y axes are
available. After the Wacom checks, any remaining device with absolute axes
should be touchscreens, and GDK_SOURCE_MOUSE does indeed just make sense on
devices with relative axes.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=757358
Using a NULL GAppInfo with g_app_launch_context_get_display() will
generate a critical warning in gio.
Use the display name instead as we don't have any valid GAppInfo to pass
to g_app_launch_context_get_display().
bugzilla: https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=756439
If GLX has support for the GLX_ARB_create_context_profile extension,
then we use the GLX_CONTEXT_COMPATIBILITY_PROFILE_BIT_ARB; if it does
not, we fall back to the old glXCreateNewContext() API.
We use the shared GdkGLContext to decide whether the GLX context should
use the legacy bit or not.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=756142
Otherwise the outer loop control variable is messed up, and we end
up with uninitialized axes if there were any more valuators after
the XIKeyClass one.
This bug was sneakily introduced by fdb9a8e14, many thanks to
Carlos Soriano for helping spot the source of this bug.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=753431
When dealing with selection events, we might see windows from
other screens in the requestor field. The current x11 backend
code fails to wrap these in a foreign GdkWindow, since we
don't have the corresponding GdkScreen anymore. Work around
this by creating such 'foreign screens' on demand. We still
maintain the 1:1 relation between the display and the screen
returned by gdk_display_get_default_screen().
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=721398
When using frame times from _NET_WM_FRAME_DRAWN and _NET_WM_FRAME_TIMINGS, we
were treating them as local monotonic times, but they are actually extended-precision
versions of the server time, and need to be translated to monotonic times in the
case where the X server and client aren't running on the same system.
This fixes rendering stalls when using X over a remote ssh connection.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=741800
Avoid using a stale timestamp (from the last user interaction with the
application) when a message arrives from D-Bus requesting that a new
window be created.
In this case the most-correct thing that we can do is to use no
timestamp at all.
We modify gdk_x11_display_set_startup_notification_id() to allow a NULL
value to mean "reset everything" and then call this function
unconditionally on receipt of D-Bus activation requests. The result
will be that a missing desktop-startup-id in the platform-data struct
will reset the timestamp.
Under their default configuration metacity and mutter will both map
windows presented with no timestamp in the foreground. This could
result in false-positive, but there is very little we can do about that
without the original timestamp from the user event.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=752000
If we don't find Xft values in the X resource db, simply fall
back to the values that are hardcoded in /etc/X11/Xresources
anyway. Extra trickery with likely-made-up screen dimensions
is not going to yield better results, and only makes for a
deeper rabbit hole when debugging.
We used to "invalidate" scroll valuators, so the next scroll event could
be used as the base for the next scroll deltas. This has the inconvenience
that it invariably consumes the first event received after enter and,
due to interactions with WM overeager passive button grabs, there's a
possibility we don't scroll at all if we receive interleaved "smooth
scroll" XI_Motion events and XI_Enter events (Normally triggered by regular
scroll wheels in mice).
In order to fix this, and at the expense of some sync-call overhead on
XI_Enter events (one XIQueryDevice call per slave device), query the
current scroll valuator state for all the slaves of the entered pointer,
so we do know beforehand the right base values. If new devices are plugged
while the pointer is on top of the client, the initialized scroll values
will match the valuators'.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=750994https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=750870
gdk_x11_device_xi2_window_at_position() may attempt to push/pop
a few error trap pairs while traversing the window tree. Move it
outside the server grab, and around the multiple XIQueryPointer
calls we may do here.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=751739
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