When rendering to an offscreen because of transforms,
check if transforming the bounds of the node results
in a non-axis-aligned quad. If it doesn't, we want
GL_NEAREST interpolation to get sharp edges. Otherwise,
we use GL_LINEAR to get better results for things
that are actually transformed.
This is a projecting version of the corresponding
graphene api. While we are at it, rewrite
gsk_matrix_transform_bounds() to use
gsk_matrix_transform_rect().
Replace our uses of graphene_matrix_transform_point,
_point3d and _bounds by our own versions that handle
projective transforms correctly.
This fixes render node bounds being incorrect for widgets
involving projective transforms (e.g. testrevealer swing
transformations), and also fixes picking on such widgets.
If some node is fully outside the clip region we don't send it to the daemon.
This helps a lot in how much data we send for scrolling viewports.
However, sending partial trees makes node reuse a bit more tricky. We
can't save for reuse any node that could possibly clip different depending on
the clip region, as that could be different next frame. So, unless the
node is fully contained in the current clip (and we thus know it is not
parial) we don't allow reusing that next frame.
This fixes#3086
Since we have now made the Win32 GL contexts share the global context as
the other backends have, we are more ready to use the GL renderer by
default on Windows as well.
Note that currently we can only enable this when not running on
OpenGL/ES as the OpenGL/ES shaders are not ready at this point, and the
OpenGL/ES support that we have from libANGLE does not support full
desktop OpenGL operations.
Track what we really need to send for inset shadows, which are used
as a border replacement in many cases.
Fishbowl says I can draw around 200-300 more switches per frame like
this too.
This is fairly substantial rewrite of the GDK backend for quartz and
renamed to macOS to allow for a greenfield implementation.
Many things have come across from the quartz implementation fairly
intact such as the eventloop integration design and discovery of
event windows from the NSEvent.
However much has been changed to fit in with the new GDK design and
how removal of child GdkWindow have been completely eliminated.
Furthermore, the new GdkPopup allows for regular NSWindow to be used
to provide popovers unlike the previous implementation.
The object design more closely follows the ideal for a GDK backend.
Views have been broken out into subclasses so that we can support
multiple GSK renderer paths such as GL and Cairo (and Metal in the
future). However mixed mode GL and Cairo will not be supported. Currently
only the Cairo renderer has been implemented.
A new frame clock implementation using CVDisplayLink provides more
accurate information about when to draw drawing the next frame. Some
testing will need to be done here to understand the power implications
of this.
This implementation has also gained edge snapping for CSD windows. Some
work was also done to ensure that CSD windows have opaque regions
registered with the display server.
** This is still very much a work-in-progress **
Some outstanding work that needs to be done:
- Finish a GL context for macOS and alternate NSView for GL rendering
(possibly using speciailized CALayer for OpenGL).
- Input rework to ensure that we don't loose remapping of keys that was
dropped from GDK during GTK 4 development.
- Make sure input methods continue to work.
- Drag-n-Drop is still very much a work in progress
- High resolution input scrolling needs various work in GDK to land
first before we can plumb that to NSEvent.
- gtk/ has a number of things based on GDK_WINDOWING_QUARTZ that need
to be updated to use the macOS backend.
But this is good enough to start playing with and breaking things which
is what I'd like to see.
This fixes the widget factory rendering too much.
In the widget-factory, we generally have a pretty small update area (two
spinners and a progressbar). We take the extents of that as a update
area and inital clip.
However, the first clip node we see is from the toplevel window, which
essentially increases the clip again to almost the entire window.
Fix that by ignoring such cases.
Respect that cairo won't create image surfaces larger
than 32767 x 32767.
This makes the one reftest pass that specifically checks
this condition, treeview-crash-too-wide.
If the inner clip intersects with the corners of the outer clip, we
potentially need a texture. We should add more fine-grained checks for
this in the future though.
Test case included.
Don't install headers for code that we don't build.
And don't include those headers in gsk.h.
Just as we do in gdk, require applications to include
the backend-specific headers they need explicitly.
Update the one affected demo, gtk4-node-editor.
Now that the GskRenderNode subclasses are recognised as proper
sub-types, we can annotate the constructors with their type. The C API
remains the same.
The introspection scanner tries to match a type name with a get_type()
function, in order to correctly identify a type as a class.
If the function is not available, we have two choices:
- add some special case inside the introspection scanner, similar to
how GParamSpec subclasses are handled in GObject
- add a simple get_type() function
The latter is the simplest approach, and we don't need to change that
much, since we still register all render nodes at once.
Language bindings—especially ones based on introspection—cannot deal
with custom type hiearchies. Luckily for us, GType has a derivable type
with low overhead: GTypeInstance.
By turning GskRenderNode into a GTypeInstance, and creating derived
types for each class of node, we can provide an introspectable API to
our non-C API consumers, with no functional change to the C API itself.
When we reconfigure, `configure_file()` is called again, and
`*.gresource.xml` files are regenerated, which causes many (all?)
binaries to be relinked. Now we only write those out if the contents
actually changed (or if the output didn't already exist).
This is exactly what Meson already does with `configure_file()` when
`command:` is not used.
While we're at it, also do the same for `gen-c-array.py` and
`gentypefuncs.py` for completeness. Now even if the input to those
changes, re-building of those custom targets may not result in
relinking if the outputted C files have the same contents.
Sprinkle various g_assert() around the code where gcc cannot figure out
on its own that a variable is not NULL and too much refactoring would be
needed to make it do that.
Also fix usage of g_assert_nonnull(x) to use g_assert(x) because the
first is not marked as G_GNUC_NORETURN because of course GTester
supports not aborting on aborts.
Transforming identity by an other transform does not mean we need to
painstakingly apply the individual steps of other to construct a new
transform, it means we can just return other.
Or in math terms:
I * B = B
so just return B.
Some systems (notably macOS) will not allow enumeration of an extension that has been promoted to core OpenGL for context in use. This change assumes that GL_ARB_timer_query is available on OpenGL 3.3+.
I could not find definitive information on whether GL_ARB_debug_output or GL_KHR_debug have been added to core. Other extensions in use were addressed by https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gtk/merge_requests/1422 .
Compute the pattern matrix directly instead of transforming the cairo_t.
This ensures that when node_size / texture_size is some obscure floating
point value, we don't get rounding issues from scaling by it once we
draw the texture_size rectangle.
I have no actual failure where this comes in handy, but I had written
the code anyway, so decided to keep it.
graphene treats equality for contains() operations as always matching,
so do the same thing.
This is because unlike integer math, floating point cannot do the "as
close as possible to the point, but not reaching it" operation that
integer does by just subtracting 1.
Commit 47c44644b1 was a bit overzealous in fixing
compiler warnings. We still need to call collect_textures,
even if we don't need the number that it returns.