This way we don't have to reopen all the time for pure updates,
and we can immediately unlink the shm file to avoid "leaking" them
on improper shutdown.
We now only update surface data after we have painted. Before we painted
in an idle, which meant we might send black data some times if we e.g.
resized the window and had not painted yet. Also, it means we're updating
less often to the daemon, saving resources.
We still have to queue a flush in the idle for non-draw operations,
otherwise e.g. resize of a toplevel will never be flushed if the clock
is frozen (e.g. during toplevel resize).
We don't want to update the window size on configure event, only
the position, as the size is client side controlled. We were
updating to an old size during resizes which causes us to send
surfaces of the wrong size to the daemon.
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.
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
Deprecate gdk_window_enable_synchronized_configure() and
gdk_window_configure_done() and make them no-ops. Implement the
handling of _NET_WM_SYNC_REQUEST in terms of the frame cycle -
we know that all processing will be finished in the next frame
cycle after the ConfigureNotify is received.
With this we always roundtrip position change to the webbrowser.
This avoids conflicts when things change from both directions (app and user).
Also, we fake configure evens when there is no web client to ensure
apps get the events.