Commit a0f6ff101e made sure that a
context was bound before calling glClientWaitSync, but it doesn't
check that the context shares objects with the context that created
the fence.
This commit does a little more validation before deciding the current
context is good enough.
Since commit 972134abe4 we now call
glClientWaitSync for the vendor nvidia driver, to know when a frame
is ready for the compositor to process.
glClientWaitSync can be called regardless of which context is currently
bound, but if no context is bound at all, it returns 0 without
doing anything.
This commit checks for that edge case, and ensures a context gets
made current in the event no context is already current, before calling
glClientWaitSync.
When given a 0 timeout, glClientWaitSync is only supposed to return one
of three possible values:
- GL_ALREADY_SIGNALED - fence fired
- GL_WAIT_FAILED - there was an error
- GL_TIMEOUT_EXPIRED - fence hasn't fired yet
In addition, it can also return GL_CONDITION_SATISFIED if a non-zero
timeout is passed, and the fence fires while waiting on the timeout.
Since commit 972134abe4 we now call
glClientWaitSync (with a 0 timeout), but one user is reporting it's
returning some value that's not one of the above four.
This commit changes the g_assert to a g_error so we can see what
value is getting returned.
May help with https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gtk/-/issues/2858
With the vendor provided Nvidia driver there is a small window of time
after drawing to a GL surface before the updates to that surface
can be used by the compositor.
Drawing is already coordinated with the compositor through the frame
synchronization protocol detailed here:
https://fishsoup.net/misc/wm-spec-synchronization.html
Unfortunately, at the moment, GdkX11Surface tells the compositor the
frame is ready immediately after drawing to the surface, not later,
when it's consumable by the compositor.
This commit defers announcing the frame as ready until it's consumable
by the compositor. It does this by listening for the X server to announce
damage events associated with the frame drawing. It tries to find the
right damage event by waiting until fence placed at buffer swap time
signals.
This commit moves some of the end frame sync counter handling
code to subroutines.
It's a minor readability win, but the main motivation is to
make it easier in a subsequent commit to defer updating the
sync counter until a more appropriate time.
commit 14bf58ec5d dropped support
for using the DAMAGE extension since there was no code that
needed it.
We're going to need it again, however, to address an NVidia
vendor driver issue.
This commit does the plumbing to add it back.
This is not used anymore now that surfaces are always toplevel in the
semantics of GdkWindow where child windows were available. We can drop
that and simplify the vfunc just a bit more.
Fixes#2765
On X11, shortcuts inhibition is emulated using a grab on the keyboard.
So if another widget ungrabs the keyboard behind our back (for example
when a popup window is dismissed) that effectively disables the effects
of the shortcut inhibition on the surface and we need to update the
shortcut inhibition status accordingly.
Check for "grab-broken" events on the surface and clear existing
shortcuts inhibition for the matching seat, so that the client can be
notified and may decide to re-enable shortcut inhibition if desired.
In the gtk-demo drag-and-drop demo i can't drag anything, all I get
is:
(gtk4-demo:358993): Gdk-CRITICAL **: 09:36:19.617: Surface 0x7e1bb0 has not been mapped in GdkSeatGrabPrepareFunc
This is because GdkX11Drag.ipc_surface is not considered mapped, even
though we called gdk_x11_surface_show() on it, because the
GDK_SURFACE_STATE_WITHDRAWN flag is still set.
I added calls to gdk_synthesize_surface_state() to match what
e.g. show_popup() and gdk_x11_toplevel_present() does.
We currently calling gdk_display_map_keyval up to
once per key event per shortcut trigger, and that function
does an expensive loop over the entire keymap and
allocates an array. Avoid this by caching the entries
in a single array, and have a lookup table for finding
the entries for a keyval.
To do this, change the GdkKeymap.get_entries_for_keyval
signature, and change the ::keys-changed signal to be
RUN_FIRST, since we want to clear the cache in the class
handler before running signal handlers. These changes are
possible now, since keymaps are no longer public API.
The api to configure surfaces is now GdkToplevelLayout
and GdkPopupLayout. Unfortunately, there's still quite
a bit of internal use of GdkGeometry that will take some
time to clean up, so move it go gdkinternals.h for now.
GdkEvent has been a "I-can't-believe-this-is-not-OOP" type for ages,
using a union of sub-types. This has always been problematic when it
comes to implementing accessor functions: either you get generic API
that takes a GdkEvent and uses a massive switch() to determine which
event types have the data you're looking for; or you create namespaced
accessors, but break language bindings horribly, as boxed types cannot
have derived types.
The recent conversion of GskRenderNode (which had similar issues) to
GTypeInstance, and the fact that GdkEvent is now a completely opaque
type, provide us with the chance of moving GdkEvent to GTypeInstance,
and have sub-types for GdkEvent.
The change from boxed type to GTypeInstance is pretty small, all things
considered, but ends up cascading to a larger commit, as we still have
backends and code in GTK trying to access GdkEvent structures directly.
Additionally, the naming of the public getter functions requires
renaming all the data structures to conform to the namespace/type-name
pattern.
For the X11 backend, keep a list of monitors for which the surface
intersects the monitor area.
Whenever the X11 surface is configured, check against the list of
monitors to determine whether it enters a new monitor or if it left a
monitor, to emit the corresponding ::enter/leave-monitor signals just
like a Wayland compositor would.
As monitors can be added, removed or reconfigured at any time, redo
those checks whenever any of these events occur.
We don't need all of them, only the ones that contain public API. This
allows us to reduce the chance of a stray symbol getting incorrectly
added to the introspection data.