The check for GDK_CURSOR_IS_PIXMAP was ineffective, since _all_
cursors have this type, from the looks of it. Instead, store
buffer ownership information separately.
These might be candidates for a future settings interface; until
then, we use GSettings directly. Note again that we are careful
to avoid a dependency on GNOME schemas.
Key repeat under X is not affected by modifiers. And on some systems
(e.g my Thinkpad), NumLock is permanently on, rendering key repeat
nonfunctional. This commit changes the Wayland backend to do
key repeat regardless of modifiers.
http://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=695497
Commit 0d9d808217 fixed the hotspot issue,
but commit f2cc52fddd then optimized away
cursor changes a little too aggressively. We always need to set the
cursor on enter. Make sure we clear the current cursor on leave so we
don't think it's already set on the next enter.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=695512
Until we figure out where we want to go with settings under
Wayland, this makes GTK+ applications a lot easier to deal
with under Wayland.
Note that we are careful to deal with the absence of schemas,
so this does not introduce a dependency on GNOME settings.
wl_pointer.set_cursor is rejected if the serial number doesn't match
the enter serial number for the wl_pointer. We passed the right serial
number when setting the cursor surface in response to the enter event.
Later set_cursor requests fail, but we can still attach new buffers to
our cursor surface, which is why the cursor changed, but the hotspot
didn't update. Clicking in the decoration results in a leave/enter pair
which triggers wl_pointer.set_cursor with the right serial. That's why
clicking the decoration sets the right cursor.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=695512
We need to pass the delta between the old and new hotspot
when attaching the new cursor surface, to keep the hotspot
at the same position. We can't deal with this in the compositor,
since the set_cursor call already overwrites the old hotspot,
so the information is lost by the time the attach happens.
Unfortunately, we can't query the initial hotspot from
the compositor, so the first cursor change will make the
hotspot jump.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=695512
Use separate fields for saving the window dimensions prior to fullscreening
and maximisation. Then use those fields to restore the window dimensions from.
Requests are not limited in size by BroadwayRequest, as
BroadwayRequestTranslation can be of variable size. No need
to copy the request anymore though, because requests are aligned
now.
With recent changes in attach semantics, we always need to attach before
committing. Without this changes to the window contents to not get reflected
in the content of the surface.
Signed-off-by: Rob Bradford <rob@linux.intel.com>
We currently use this information to display the title
string in the window list of the desktop shell.
Signed-off-by: Rob Bradford <rob@linux.intel.com>
Both of them started to make use of round(), a C99 function. So, include
fallback-c89.c to provide a fallback implementation for round() for
compilers that don't have round()
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=694339
If no updates, redraws, or repaints have been scheduled for this frame,
we will skip immediately to RESUME_EVENTS, and no GdkFrameTimings will
be created.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=694732
When events are paused, we should not return TRUE from prepare() or check().
GTK+ handles this for events that are already in the GTK+ queue, but
we also need suppress checks for events that are in the system queue - if we
return TRUE indicating that there are events in the system queue, then we'll
call dispatch(), and do nothing. The event source will spin, and will never
run the other phases of the paint clock.
(Broadway doesn't have a window system queue separate from the GDK event queue,
but we write the function the same way for consistency.)
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=694274
When events are paused, we should not return TRUE from prepare() or check().
GTK+ handles this for events that are already in the GTK+ queue, but
we also need suppress checks for events that are in the system queue - if we
return TRUE indicating that there are events in the system queue, then we'll
call dispatch(), and do nothing. The event source will spin, and will never
run the other phases of the paint clock.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=694274
Commit 1db87c897f accidentally removed
a check for !in_paint_idle in maybe_start_idle which causes us
to create a paint loop whenever something requests a phase
inside the paint_idle.