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.
This will hopefully help resolve the circular dependency between
libgtk linking against inspector/libgtkinspector and inspector/
needing extract-strings from gtk/.
I didn't preserve the EXEEXT decorations in this operation -
automake gave me stern warnings about it, so I just dropped them
all. Somebody who cross-builds GTK+ will have to reconstruct this.
Moving the inspector into libgtk lets use reuse internals without
having to add public API for everything or inventing awkward private
call conventions.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=730095
This is a web service provided by Google that allows people to
share their printers (https://www.google.com/cloudprint/learn/).
In addition to being able to print to printers shared on Google Cloud
Print, there is an equivalent of "Print to file" in the form of "Save to
Google Drive".
The cloudprint module uses gnome-online-accounts to obtain the OAuth 2.0
access token for the Google account.
Currently it can discover available printers, get simple details about
them such as display name and status, and submit jobs without any
special options.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=723368
When not doing cross-builds, use the values of CFLAGS, CPPFLAGS and
LDFLAGS as the default value for CFLAGS_FOR_BUILD, CPPFLAGS_FOR_BUILD
and LDFLAGS_FOR_BUILD, respectively.
This avoids having to manually specify these variables in order to get
extract-strings to build properly.
This should really be handled by ax_prog_cc_for_build.m4. That has been
reported upstream. This is a workaround for now.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=721346
We add a custom im module for broadway that calls some broadway
specific APIs to show/hide the keyboard on focus in/out. We then forward this
to the browser, and on the ipad we focus an input field to activate
the keyboard.
The docs for GtkPlug/GtkSocket were not generated if any
of the win32, quartz, wayland backends were enabled. What
we really mean though, is that we want the docs to be generated
whenever GtkPlug/GtkSocket are included in the library, which
is when the x11 backend is enabled.
As long as we are not ready to switch over the default backend,
arrange ./configure without explicit backend options makes the
x11 backend mandatory and the wayland backend optional (depending
on whether we find Wayland dependencies).
http://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=709212
Add a new example to the getting started part of the docs. The focus
of this example is on 'new stuff': GtkApplication, templates, settings,
gmenu, gaction, GtkStack, GtkHeaderBar, GtkSearchBar, GtkRevealer,
GtkListBox, GtkMenuButton, etc.
It is being developed in several steps. Each step is put in a separate
directory below examples/: application1, ..., application8. This is a
little repetitive, but lets us use the code of all examples in the
documentation.
This adds a crypt(3) implementation for use with broadwayd as Visual Studio
does not support crypt(3) out of the box.
The public domain implementation is taken from the following URL,
http://michael.dipperstein.com/crypt/, where AFAICT this implementation
would not be subject to licensing restrictions that would prevent it from
being bundled.
Change the visibility handling to be the same way we do it in
GLib now. We pass -fvisibility=hidden to gcc and decorate public
functions with __attribute__((visibility("default"))).
This commit just does this for GDK, GTK+ will follow later.
The gtk-launch tool can be build without gio-unix (although it
will not really do much without an alternative implementation for
g_desktop_app_info).
So there is no need to not build gtk-launch anymore.
This reverts commit 9a1235bf0d.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=682824
Converts usage of Avahi API to DBus calls. This change allows
us to remove dependency on avahi-gobject and avoids of possible
circular dependency.
Lists printers if Gtk+ is compiled with CUPS 1.6 or newer.
Show printers advertised by avahi on local network. CUPS
backend now looks for _ipps._tcp and _ipp._tcp services
offered by avahi. If it finds such a service (printer)
it requests its attributes through IPP_GET_PRINTER_ATTRIBUTES
ipp request and adds it to the list of printers. Such printer
behaves like a remote printer then.
If an avahi printer is a default printer then it is considered
default by the backend only if there is no local or remote
default printer.
This functionality is enabled when building Gtk+ with CUPS 1.6
or later because it replaces browsing protocol removed in CUPS 1.6.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=688956
The following patch added a dependency on a new API first available in that
release:
commit 92f0c5c384
Author: Mike Gorse <mgorse@suse.com>
Date: Mon Dec 3 16:07:23 2012 -0600
Add accessibility for GtkLevelBar and value test
This reverts commit cd98eb15cb.
It turns out that we just started using AX_PROG_CC_FOR_BUILD, which
for some reason requires AC_CANONICAL_TARGET. That seems wrong to
me, but for now, lets just keep using it.
This autoconf macro should only be used for building compilers
(or compiler tools) for a specific target. The current effect of
it in GTK3 is that it causes various executables like gtk3-demo
to be prefixed with $target- when the --target configure flag
is set or when cross-compiling. When cross-compiling GTK3 on
Linux for the Win32 target this causes the gtk3-demo binary
to be named i686-w64-mingw32-gtk3-demo.exe instead of just
gtk3-demo.exe (like it was before commit 53083ea7b4)
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=692638
The underlying code uses API that is no longer available with 1.0. This
optional, off by default build mode hasn't worked since the release of
Wayland 1.0.
When cross-compiling, instead of depending on a natively built GTK+ (which means
building Glib, ATK, Pango, gdk-pixbuf, libX11...) for gtk-update-icon-cache,
find the host compiler and gdk-pixbuf, and build another gtk-update-icon-cache
with that.
This uses AX_PROG_CC_FOR_BUILD from autostars to find the host compiler, and
assumes that you'd set PKG_CONFIG_FOR_BUILD to a host pkg-config binary.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=691301
We use the new g_type_get_type_registration_serial() so that we can
cache and properly invalidate the result of g_type_from_name().
This bumps the glib requirement to 2.35.3 to get the new function.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=689847
Pango 1.32.4 has a feature where any PangoLayout automatically handles
the case where a PangoContext is changed. We want to rely on this to
avoid having to clear layouts too often, so we make this a hard dep.
This is so newer versions of those libraries don't cause more warnings
with a stable GTK version.
We don't ever want to turn off deprecation warnings for master however,
because that's where we get rid of deprecated API we use.
Note that only glib allows use to easily do this, so nothing is done for
Pango, gdk-pixbuf or Cairo here.
libxkbcommon has had some changes to its API. However, it now has a
stable release (0.2.0), so this makes the necessary changes, and
replaces all uses of the deprecated API.
Signed-off-by: Ran Benita <ran234@gmail.com>
Some builders using gtk3 outside of the GNOME cycle want an option to
avoid linking to atk-bridge-2.0. Provide that, and at the same time
ensure we're only looking for it on X11 platforms.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=677491
Instead, always use PKG_CHECK_MODULES(). That macro actually gets it
right. In particular the erroring out part when you miss xkbcommon or
wayland-client.
nearbyint(), isinf() and isnan() are C99 functions, so check for them.
Also clean up configure.ac a little bit as the checks for rint() and
round() can be a bit simpler, according to Matthias' suggestions.
GApplication now makes the session bus and object path available as a
public API on the application instance. Use that instead of trying to
guess values for ourselves.
This causes this version of Gtk+ to depend on GLib 2.32.2, so bumping
version dependency accordingly.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=671249
Due to the way the tests are structured, a missing libXext will give a
warning about a missing libX11 (even if libX11 is installed). This is
confusing to people who are trying to build Gtk.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=674200
This change adds --enable-wayland-cairo-gl which turns on the define used in
the Wayland backend to determine whether to use EGL surfaces with Cairo GL or
whether to use the Cairo image backend with an SHM surface (the default).
Part of the fix for: https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=672361
Try to fetch the name from the application desktop file for the
fallback menu if possible, instead of forcing applications to use
g_set_application_name or hardcoding "Application".
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=673882
Check for the XIScrollClassInfo struct in addition to the existing
check for XIAllowTouchEvents() because Ubuntu Oneiric seems to
have an incomplete backport which has one but not the other.
Based on a patch by Murray Cumming,
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=671453
These macros follow the recent changes in GLibs deprecation
setup. We now annotate deprecated functions with the version
they were deprecated in, and you can define the macro
GDK_VERSION_MIN_REQUIRED to cut off deprecation warnings for
'recent' deprecations.
At the same time, we introduce version annotations for new API
and allow you to avoid 'recent' API additions by defining
GDK_VERSION_MAX_ALLOWED.