Since we are likely going to see theme names like
Adwaita and HighContrast, make fallback work as follows:
Adwaita -> Default
Adwaita:dark -> Default:dark
HighContrast -> Default:hc
HighContrast:dark -> Default:hc-dark
HighContrastInverse -> Default:hc-dark
Other themes will fall back to Default, as before.
These don't take a duration, instead they call g_get_monotonic_time() to
and subtract the start time for it.
Almost all our calls are like this, and this makes the callsites clearer
and avoids inlining the clock call into the call site.
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.
We have so many properties that it is basically impossible that all of
them are set and the time spent checking is higher than the time saved
if it does indeed happen.
Instead of a foreach() function, introduce an iterator, so that the
caller can drive the iteration.
This allows doing stuff inbetween callbacks and avoids closures when
more than one data object should be passed.
As a side effect I even get a small, but noticeable performance
improvement in the 2-10% range depending on benchmark, I guess that's
because there's no function pointer passing going on anymore.
Instead of just doing radical change matching on the node itself, also
consider the parent nodes via the bloom filter.
This means a radical change is now also one where the parent
name/id/classes change, but since that's considered a radical change on
the parent already, those things are slow anyway.
Improves the benchmark times for CSS validation during backdrop
transitions in widget-factory from 45ms to 35ms on my machine.
Add a fast path for parent selector matching that uses a bloom filter to
quickly discard selectors that can't possibly match.
Keep in mind that we match using a bloom filter, so we might
accidentally include too many selectors when hash/bucket collisions
occur.
That's not a correctness problem though, because we'll do a real check
afterwards.
The idea for this change is taken from browsers, in particular WebKit.
We use the superset matcher in exactly one place,
so there is no need for the generality of allowing
to ignore different aspects. Just hardcode the one
case we need: ignoring everything except for name,
id and class.
The tree is optimized for mimizing the decisions, and is built ahead-of-time.
That prevents us from taking advantage of the information in the matcher when
collecting changes.
So, instead do what we used to do for verification: Use the selector tree
for finding the superset matches, then just walk the rulesets to collect
the changes.
Since we are now recomputing the change masks much less frequently, this
slightly less optimized way of computing them is not a problem, and will
let us compute better results in the future, by improving the superset
matcher to be more precise.
It's almost never useful to have a bitmask here, since it's only used
for the intersection case in gtk_css_style_provider_lookup. However,
even if that returns true, we still need to check every single style
property for being set again in the look afterwards.
Just remove the bitmask.
We don't want to return a GFile because GFile can't handle can't deal
with data: urls.
That makes the code a bit more complicated that doesn't deal with those
URLs, but it makes the other code actually work.
GtkCssImageUrl also now decodes data urls immediately instead of only at
the first load. So don't use data urls if you care about performance.