There is no shape combining going on anymore, so
call this just gdk_surface_set_input_region, and
remove the offset arguments too. All callers pass
0 anyway.
Update all callers and implementations.
When a popup is already showing, and gdk_surface_present_popup() is
called, if the layout didn't change, we're not really interested in
relayouting.
In the future, we'll be able to get notified if position of the popup
would change by some environmental changes, but until then, just don't
support it.
Restructure the getters for event fields to
be more targeted at particular event types.
Update all callers, and replace all direct
event struct access with getters.
As a side-effect, this drops some unused getters.
Replace the gdk_surface_move_to_rect() API with a new GdkSurface
method called gdk_surface_present_popup() taking a new GdkPopupLayout
object describing how they should be laid out on screen.
The layout properties provided are the same as the ones used with
gdk_surface_move_to_rect(), except they are now set up using
GdkPopupLayout.
Calling gdk_surface_present_popup() will either show the popup at the
position described using the popup layout object and a new unconstrained
size, or reposition it accordingly.
In some situations, such as when a popup is set to autohide, presenting
may immediately fail, in case the grab was not granted by the display
server.
After a successful present, the result of the layout can be queried
using the following methods:
* gdk_surface_get_position() - to get the position relative to its
parent
* gdk_surface_get_width() - to get the current width
* gdk_surface_get_height() - to get the current height
* gdk_surface_get_rect_anchor() - to get the anchor point on the anchor
rectangle the popup was effectively positioned against given
constraints defined by the environment and the layout rules provided
via GdkPopupLayout.
* gdk_surface_get_surface_anchor() - the same as the one above but for
the surface anchor.
A new signal replaces the old "moved-to-rect" one -
"popup-layout-changed". However, it is only intended to be emitted when
the layout changes implicitly by the windowing system, for example if
the monitor resolution changed, or the parent window moved.
We can map a non-grabbing popup wherever, it's just the grabbing
popup-chain that needs to be ensured not to break any ordering rules.
Fix this by managing two lists; one of open popups, and another for
grabbing ones.
Now popups surfaces are always created with the parent set, so we don't
need to implement vorious guess work to try to find what the parent
might be. Remove that code and just use GdkSurface::parent which is
where the parent set during construction ends up at.
Add event queues specifically for surface configuration events
(xdg_surface.configure, xdg_toplevel.configure, xdg_popup.configure etc)
so that a configuration can be completed without having side effects on
other surfaces. This will be used to synchronously configure specific
GdkSurfaces, as is needed by the Gtk layout mechanisms.
The freezing is conditioned on various state, so lets make the thawing a
bit more robust. Without this there was a risk that we'd thaw too many
times if there was a frame callback requested while the conditions for
the freezing were not met.
When we use if (GDK_PROFILER_IS_RUNNING) this means we get an
inlined if (FALSE) when the compiler support is not compiled in, which
gets rid of all the related code completely.
We also expand to G_UNLIKELY(gdk_profiler_is_running ()) in the supported
case which might cause somewhat better code generation.
usec is the scale of the monotonic timer which is where we get almost
all the times from. The only actual source of nsec is the opengl
GPU time (but who knows what the actual resulution of that is).
Changing this to usec allows us to get rid of " * 1000" in a *lot* of
places all over the codebase, which are ugly and confusing.
Add marks for when we do commits, swap buffer or
receive frame events. These are the low-level start
and end points of the frame cycle, and it is useful
to see them in the profiler.
The existing xdg-shell protocols do not support minimization in a way
that allows us to implement the GdkSurface API; the only minimization
operation does not come with a state notification, nor it comes with
a way to undo itself.
Closes: #67
The "iconified" state is mostly an X11-ism; every other platform calls
this state "minimized" because it may not involve turning a window into
an icon at all.
When calling gdk_wayland_surface_export_handle(), if we pass
some 'user_data' but no 'destroy_func', GTK4 crashes. That's
because in xdg_exported_handle() we are unconditionally calling
destroy_func -- even when it's NULL.
Fix that by checking if there's a destroy function before calling
it.
Fixes https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gtk/issues/2179
Windows/surface's aren't supposed to be explicitly moved by any external
part, so don't provide API for doing so. Usage throughout Gdk is
replaced by the corresponding backend variants.
To separate how toplevels and popups are configured, a first step is to
introduce a resize-only vfunc for backends to implement. It's meant to
only configure toplevel windows, i.e. popups. Currently it's used for
both types, but introducing the resize-only API is a first step.
Configuration should happen in response to the xdg_surface.configure
event, not in the events that preceeds it. Do this by making all
configured state pending until the committing "configure" event. Also
split up toplevel vs popup configuration in a more clear way.
To make a frame clock tick as long as any of the associated surfaces
expect to receive ticks, make the surfaces inhibit freezing the clock,
instead of directly tell the frame clock to freeze itself.
This makes it so that as long as any surface using a certain frame clock
is not frozen (e.g. just received a frame event from the display
server), the frame clock will not be frozen.
With this, the frame clock is initiated as frozen, and won't be thawed
until any surface inhibits freeze. It will be frozen again, when every
surface has that previously inhibited freeze uninhibited freeze.
The Wayland backend has a hack to work around
a race with popover mapping: If the surface size
changes before the initial configure, we hide and
show the surface. Unfortunately, the code was doing
this in a way that is externally observable (by
listening for surface state changes), and popovers
were observing it and hiding themselves in response.
Avoid this by not going through the GDK frontend
code for this.