Previously, the GDK backend for Wayland would deduce the logical size
of the monitors from the wl_output size and scale.
With the addition of fractional scaling which advertises a larger scale
value and then scale down the client surface, the computed logical size
of the monitors in GDK would be wrong and confuse applications which
insist on using the monitor size and position (like Firefox).
The xdg-output protocol aims at describing outputs in a way which is more
in line with the concept of an output on desktop oriented systems by
presenting the outputs using their logical size and position appropriately
transformed.
Add support for the optional xdg-output protocol so that the size and
position of the monitors as reported by GDK is correct even when using
fractional scaling.
Fixes: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gtk/issues/1828
This resulted in -DINCLUDE_IM_ti-et getting passed to gcc resulting in
lots of warnings. Use underscorify() so we get the correct -DINCLUDE_IM_ti_et instead.
Commits a04fef4 and cc7f9c4 inadvertedly broke Visual Studio builds as
it caused the following to show up when configuring:
gdk\meson.build:281:0: ERROR: Invalid Shared library version "vs9.2404.4". Must be of the form X.Y.Z where all three are numbers. Y and Z are optional.
Since we do not set a library version that mingles with the minor and
micro versions, along with libtool current for any Visual Studio builds,
just set those versions as 3 on Visual Studio builds, and things should
work the way they did before.
Since commit 3b2f9395, the frame time may be set into the future, so
only ensure monotonicity, and don't store the offset. This prevents the
frame time from becoming out of sync with g_get_monotonic_time().
Fixes#1612
We also need to ensure that we pass in -DINCLUDE_IM_xxxx when building
the GTK DLL/.so, in addition to building the respective (static)
immodules, so that we did really link in the immodules into the final
GTK DLL/.so.
This ensures that current Visual Studio project files and NMake
Makefiles (which do not use pkg-config files) do not break with the
Meson-built GTK-3.x libraries.
Make it a yes/no/auto combo. "yes" means all modules are built into libgtk,
"no" that none are and "auto" uses the platform defaults, yes on win32,
no otherwise.
If we need more we can always extend it later.
This makes the DLL names match those that are produced by the Visual
Studio projects by default.
This, currently, however, names the .lib files same as the ones that
are produced for other platforms (i.e. <libname>-3.lib). This is
actually not that bad as one can just copy those .lib's into
<libname>-3.0.lib when needed and the binaries that link to those .lib's
ultimately link to the same DLLs, so this should not harm binary
compatibility.
It may be so that Cairo is not found using pkg-config files, so we
cannot just use .name() on the Cairo deps directly.
Since we already have a similar mechanism for generating the GDK .pc
files, re-use and share that mechanism.
It seems that Meson 0.50.0 broke dependency search using CMake for
HarfBuzz at least, so we add a workaround for it to look for the
HarfBuzz headers and libraries manually when we couldn't find HarfBuzz
using the pkg-config and CMake method.
Various adjustments to make the config.h output between autotools
and meson more similar by testing on Linux and Windows/MSYS2.
Setting things to 1 instead of true and shifting things around is motivated
by reducing the diff between the generated files.
getting_started.xml uses relative paths for including code examples
and for some reason the base path is different with meson than with autotools.
Switch both autotools and meson to generate the file and insert the absolute
source path instead.
This also cleans up the content file list: the expand content files have to
be in the content file list as well, so just append them there.
This changes the configure option into two states:
auto: build all that can be build (default)
A list of backend names: build them and fail if we can't
"papi" is missing because it's not in Debian and I can't test it.