Instead of handling WM_DISPLAYCHANGE on every GdkWindow, only handle
it on an ad-hoc hidden window we create when opening the display.
This has two reasons:
1) we want emit the display::size-changed signal even if there are no
gtk windows currently open
2) we want to emit the signal just once and not once for every window
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=757324
This is a variable holding a ref to an object, so it is
a great case to use g_set_object and g_clear_object.
# Please enter the commit message for your changes. Lines starting
We need to rename the projects so that when these projects are added
into an all-in-one solution file that will build the GTK+ 2/3 stack,
the names of the projects will not collide with the GTK+-2.x ones,
especially as GTK+-2.x and GTK+-3.x are done to co-exist on the same
system. This is due to the case that the MSVC projects are directly
carried over from the GTK+-2.x ones and was then updated for 3.x.
We still need to update the GUIDs of the projects, so that they won't
conflict with the GTK+-2.x ones.
Use the common automake module from the previous commit in the
Makefile.am's, which means that the Makefile.am's in gdk/ and gtk/ can be
cleaned up as a result. As a side effect, the property sheet that is used
to "install" the build results and headers can now be generated in terms of
the listing of headers to copy during 'make dist', where we can acquire
most of the list of headers to "install", so that we can largely avoid the
situation where the property sheet files are not updated in time for this,
causing missing headers when this build of GTK+ is being used.
Also use the Visual Studio Project file generation for the following
projects:
gtk3-demo
gtk3-demo-application
gtk3-icon-browser
gdk-win32
gdk-broadway
gail-util
So that the maintenace of these project files can be simplified as well.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=681965
Windows does not send any release key event for one of the shift keys
when both shift keys were pressed together. This commit solves
the problem by sending the extra release key event for the shift key
which was released as first, when the other shift key is released.
Other modifiers (e.g. Ctrl, Alt) do not have this problem.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=751721
Load themed cursors from the same places they are loaded on freedesktop systems,
but use W32 API functions to do so (works for .cur/.ani cursors instead of X
cursors).
Refactor the code for cursor handling. Prefer loading cursors by name.
Do not load actual cursors when loading the theme. Find the files and remember
the arguments/calls for loading them instead. Keeping HCURSOR instance in the
hashmap would result in multiple GdkCursors using the same HCURSOR. Given that
we use DestroyCursor() to off them, this would cause problems (at the very
least - DestroyCursor() would fail).
Store GdkCursor instances in a cache. Update cached cursors when theme changes.
Recognize "system" theme as a special (and default) case. When it is set,
prefer system cursors and fall back to Adwaita cursors and (as a last resort)
built-in X cursors. Otherwise prefer theme cursors and fall back to system and
X cursors.
Force GTK to use "left_ptr" cursor when no cursor is set. Using NULL makes
it use the system default "arrow", which is not the intended behaviour when
a non-system theme is selected.
Ignore cursor size setting and query the OS for the required cursor size, as
Windows (almost) does not allow setting cursors of arbitrary size.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=749287
In particular this means that cursors are disposed of by the way of
g_object_unref(), not DestroyCursor (which is documented to not to be
used on certain kinds of cursors, and we can't tell which is which).
It should also alleviate any concerns about destroying cursors that
are still in use by other windows, except for cases where we would
somehow get our hands on a HCURSOR that someone else is using and we
make a GdkCursor out of it and later unref and finalize it while it
is still in use.
It also removes the need to call CopyCursor(), which makes animated
cursors into non-animated ones as a side-effect (supposed to be a bug,
but try explaining that to MS). Now cursors should be animated (if
the are set up as such in the OS).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=697477
This is purely to support gdk_cursor_new_from_name().
In particular, its counterpart, gdk_cursor_new_for_display(), will not
be affected, because there's no GDK_LEFT_PTR_WATCH cursor type,
and because i don't have a fallback cursor bitmask for gdk/win32/xcursors.h
We now have proper checks for gdk_screen_is_composited() and a proper
implementation for gdk_screen_get_rgba_visual() for Windows, so we
can remove the comments in this file stating that they aren't
available for Windows.
Requires Vista and newer.
* Create surfaces with cairo_win32_surface_create_with_format
* Provide an rgba visual that can be distinguished from the system visual
* Make rgba visual the best available visual
* Enable alpha-transparency for all windows that we control
* Check for appropriate cairo capabilities at configure time
(W32 - 1.14.3 newer than 2015-04-14; others - 1.14.0)
* Check for composition support before enabling CSDs
* Re-enable transparency on WM_DWMCOMPOSITIONCHANGED
Windows that were created while composition was enabled and that were CSDed
as a result and will look ugly (thick black borders or no borders at all) once
composition is disabled.
If composition is enabled afterwards, they will return back to normal.
This happens, for example, when RDP session is opened to a desktop where a GTK
application is running. For W7/Vista windows will only re-gain transparency after
the RDP session is closed. For W8 transparency will only be gone momentarily.
Windows that were created while composition was disabled will not be CSDed
automatically and will use SSD (WM decorations), while windows that are CSDed
manually will get a thin square border.
If composition is enabled afterwards, these windows will not change.
This is most noticeable for system menus (popup menus are often generated
on the fly, system menus are created once) and some dialogues (About dialogue,
for example).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=727316
GdkKeymap already has support for _get_num_lock_state() and
_get_caps_lock_state(). Adding _get_scroll_lock_state() would be good
for completness and some backends (Windows?) could take advantage of
this.
This reverts commit 24d3f3fcb2.
Sorry, I am going to re-commit this very shortly with a new
commit message, as I found the commit message to be quite
wrong and misleading.
The current GdkScreen->is_composited() is a stub as we were having Windows
XP being supported, which does not support Desktop Window Manager (DWM),
which is used by Windows for composition.
Windows Vista and later support DWM, and it is always enabled on Windows 8/
Server 2012 and later.
Please note that as we are dropping XP support in this cycle, this is the
commit that would say goodbye to Windows XP support for GTK+-3.x, by
linking directly to dwmapi.dll. This means, we only check whether we are
on Windows 8 or Server 2012 (or later) to see whether we unconditionally
have composition enabled.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=741849
Use screen workarea to *also* set the position of a maximized window,
not just its size. Without this the window position defaults to 0:0
(the topleft corner), which is wrong when taskbar is position along the
top or left edge of the screen.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=746821
The existence of OpenGL implementations that do not provide the full
core profile compatibility because of reasons beyond the technical, like
llvmpipe not implementing floating point buffers, makes the existence of
GdkGLProfile and documenting the fact that we use core profiles a bit
harder.
Since we do not have any existing profile except the default, we can
remove the GdkGLProfile and its related API from GDK and GTK+, and sweep
the whole thing under the carpet, while we wait for an extension that
lets us ask for the most compatible profile possible.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=744407
Now that we have a two-stages GL context creation sequence, we can move
the profile to a pre-realize option, like the debug and forward
compatibility bits, or the GL version to use.
Emit an error if the profile is different.
This is a follow-up commit to commits cc45e82 (x11/gl: Ensure we use the
3.2 core profile) and 2d9081d (wayland/gl: Ensure we use the 3.2 core
profile), so that we do the same on GDK-Win32. Update variable names and
comments so that the code is clearer to people, as we still need a
temporary legacy WGL context first before we can use
wglCreateContextAttribsARB() to create a WGL core (3.2+) context.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=741946
Like what is being done in the X11 and Wayland backends, create the
GdkWin32GLContext in 2 steps, where we only create the actual WGL context
in _gdk_win32_gl_context_realize().
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=741946
The default ->upload_texture() works also for Windows since commit 27cf0fa,
as some of the problems described in 742953 also applied for GL core
contexts on Windows as well before 27cf0fa. Clean up the GDK-Win32 code a
little bit as a result.
This function is given a barely setup GdkEvent, so the GdkDevice field
is still unset, causing warnings and misbehaviors when the position
is queried for it.
Given that the wintab GTK+ code seems to rely somewhat hard on the wintab
device managing the pointer cursor, query the pointer position from the
pointer itself.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=743330
The window used NULL as a parent window, which defaults internally to
using the root window of the default screen. But at the time wintab is
initialized, there is no default display/screen yet.
Fix this by retrieving this information from the given GdkDeviceManager,
so we don't have to wait for the display to be in place before
initialization.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=743330
This adds support for OpenGL to the GDK Windows backend using the WGL API
calls, which enables programs that uses the GTK+ GLArea widgets to work on
Windows as well.
This also adds a simple utility function to query for the version of OpenGL
that is supported by the Windows system, like the one provided by the X11
backend.
Many thanks to Alex (and Emmanuele, who started the OpenGL integration in
GTK+) who offered advice and help along the way, as well as the X11 and
Wayland backend for this work to refer to and to model upon.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=740795
X11 backend doesn't, and for good reason - main code body does not check
that the window it sets opacity for is, in fact, toplevel.
Just silently fail to do anything for non-toplevel windows.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=733769
Support environment variable GDK_WIN32_FONT_RESOLUTION that can be set to
a desired dpi (72, 96, 130, etc) to override system settings. Useful for
debugging, since changing system font scaling requires the user to log off
and log on again.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=734038
Use (cairo) input shape of the window to check whether a point is inside or not
inside the window.
If it is, let the default window procedure do its thing (which seems to be
working all right in all known cases).
If it isn't, override the default window procedure and tell WM what we think.
Don't do any of the above if the window has CSD-incompatible styles (WS_BORDER
or WS_THICKFRAME).
This is a crude kind of substitute for window input shape support (which W32
does not seem to have). Still probably enough to be positive about input shapes
support.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=733679
This function currently calls gdk_win32_window_shape_combine_region(),
which is wrong, because it leads to SetWindowRgn() being called with
non-NULL region, which makes W32 disable theming (particularly - decoration
theming), which makes decorations revert back to old GDI-drawn Windows 2000
variant, which looks out of place and interacts *badly* with alpha channel
(because GDI).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=733671
Since the Win32 code never actually called InvalidateRgn or used the
Win32 update area at all, that meant the only thing that could possibly
invalidate the window was the Win32 window manager as part of scrolling
or resizing, which would also send it a WM_PAINT message.
But the WM_PAINT handling called BeginPaint / EndPaint, which clears the
update area completely! We also draw out-of-band, not directly when
handling WM_PAINT, so there's no way that the update area inside the
Win32 WM would match our local one.
There is no possible way that this queue_antiexpose implementation could
do anything. Remove it.
Traditionally, the way painting was done in GTK+ was with the
"expose-event" handler, where you'd use GDK methods to do drawing on
your surface. In GTK+ 2.24, we added cairo support with gdk_cairo_create,
so you could paint your graphics with cairo.
Since then, we've added client-side windows, double buffering, the paint
clock, and various other enhancements, and the modern way to do drawing
is to connect to the "draw" signal on GtkWidget, which hands you a
cairo_t. To do double-buffering, the cairo_t we hand you is actually on
a secret surface, not the actual backing store of the window, and when
the draw handler completes we blit it into the main backing store
atomically.
The code to do this is with the APIs gdk_window_begin_paint_region,
which creates the temporary surface, and gdk_window_end_paint which
blits it back into the backing store. GTK+'s implementation of the
"draw" signal uses these APIs.
We've always sort-of supported people calling gdk_cairo_create
"outside" of a begin_paint / end_paint like old times, but then you're
not getting the benefit of double-buffering, and it's harder for GDK to
optimize.
Additionally, newer backends like Mir and Wayland can't actually support
this model, since they're based on double-buffering and swapping buffers
at various points in time. If we hand you a random cairo_t, we have no
idea when is a good time to swap.
Remove support for this.
This is technically a GDK API break: a warning is added in cases where
gdk_cairo_create is called outside of a paint cycle, and the returned
surface is a dummy that won't ever be composited back onto the main
surface. Testing with complex applications like Ardour didn't produce
any warnings.
Having the same, usable, default appearance acroll platforms
trumps having a more-or-less working native theme. The default
will be Adwaita on all platforms. The native ms-windows theme
is of course still available.
It may happen that the received clipboard data is empty, but
if it's of type image/bmp, gtk+ will crash:
gdk_property_change: 00030AD4 GDK_SELECTION image/bmp REPLACE 8*0 bits:
... delayed rendering
gdk_selection_send_notify_for_display: 00030AD4 CLIPBOARD image/bmp
GDK_SELECTION (no-op)
_gdk_win32_selection_convert_to_dib: 1252003C image/bmp
Program received signal SIGSEGV, Segmentation fault.
0x749a9f40 in msvcrt!memmove () from C:\Windows\syswow64\msvcrt.dll
Thread 1 (Thread 2248.0x1b34):
target=0xc07b) at gdkselection-win32.c:1292
at gdkevents-win32.c:3498
wparam=8, lparam=0) at gdkevents-win32.c:232
message=773, wparam=8, lparam=0)
at gdkevents-win32.c:263
C:\Windows\syswow64\user32.dll
C:\Users\rugoosse\AppData\Local\virt-viewer\bin\libpangocairo-1.0-0.dll
wparam=0, lparam=-1687549457)
at gdkevents-win32.c:248
C:\Users\rugoosse\AppData\Local\virt-viewer\bin\libpangocairo-1.0-0.dll
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=728745
Get monitor on which the most of the window is located (nearest monitor if
window is not on screen), get its work area (area not occupied by taskbar or
any other bars) and use that for maxsize.
Previous default of 30000 meant that windows maximized onto full screen,
even covering the area where taskbar is.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=726592
...on Windows 8+ and when the system setting for non-Unicode programs do
not match the language version of Windows by falling back to using Pango.
This ensures that the correct font is used during these scenarios, so that
we minimize the risk of seeing garbled characters for texts that the system
code page does not support due to system peculiarties. There might be a
way to support gtk-font-name handling using the native Windows APIs
directly on Windows 8+, but that needs to be investigated.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=726298
It seems that some backends implemented get_root_origin wrong
and returned the client window coordinates, not the frame window
coordinates. Since it's possible to implement generically for all
windows, let's do that instead of having a separate impl vfunc.
Instead of destroying the surface in the backend if this is
unable to resize, let the core code do it, and do it properly.
Based on a patch by Benjamin Otte.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=725172
If a motion event handler (or other handler running from the flush-events
phase of the frame clock) recursed the main loop then flushing wouldn't
complete until after the recursed main loop returned, and various aspects
of the state would get out of sync.
To fix this, change flushing of the event queue to simply mark events as
ready to flush, and let normal event delivery handle the rest.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=705176
Although I can't find explicit documentation for clipboard pointer, it
seems to be possible to modify clibpoard memory without side-effects.
According to MSDN,
http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/windows/desktop/aa366596%28v=vs.85%29.aspx
"The global and local functions are supported for porting from 16-bit
code, or for maintaining source code compatibility with 16-bit
Windows. Starting with 32-bit Windows, the global and local functions
are implemented as wrapper functions that call the corresponding heap
functions using a handle to the process's default heap."
"Memory objects allocated by GlobalAlloc and LocalAlloc are in private,
committed pages with read/write access that cannot be accessed by other
processes. Memory allocated by using GlobalAlloc with GMEM_DDESHARE is
not actually shared globally as it is in 16-bit Windows. This value has
no effect and is available only for compatibility. "
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=711553
The MINMAXINFO struct was being populated based upon geometry hints when
GDK_HINT_MAX_SIZE flag was enabled, then promptly having its values blown
away with default values.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=711110
...for the gdk_cursor_new_from_surface work (commit b2113b73) where the
types of some parameters were changed, and also to silence a critical
GDK_IS_DEVICE when a menu item is selected (courtesy of LE GARREC Vincent
from bug 696756).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=705980
Due to the work on gdk_cursor_new_from_surface (commit b2113b73),
get_cursor_for_pixbuf() in GdkDisplayClass was converted to
get_cursor_for_surface(), which means the GDK Win32 backend needs to be
updated for the code to build and run on Windows, plus some function
prototypes and declarations/calls need to be updated as well.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=705980
This reverts commit b2e666bf8f.
We need to keep cursor blinking configurable for accessibility
reasons.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=704134
Conflicts:
gdk/win32/gdkproperty-win32.c
gdk/x11/gdksettings.c
gtk/gtksettings.c
gtk/gtktextview.c
Move all the system includes, defines and function prototypes into a
separate header gdkwin32misc.h, so that we could keep gdkwin32.h as simple
as possible.
...this was split into two commits as this source file has different
line endings (for some reason) from the other GDK-Win32 source files that
were updated in the quest to refrain from using deprecated APIs
We want a surface so we can properly represent the scale factor for it.
All backends are converted to use surfaces and we reimplement the
backwards compat code in the generic code.
We've long had double precision mouse coordinates on wayland (e.g.
when rotating a window) but with the new scaling we even have it on
X (and, its also in Xinput2), so convert all the internal mouse/device
position getters to use doubles and add new accessors for the
public APIs that take doubles instead of ints.
Include config.h first so that _GDK_EXTERN may be defined once
and only once during the build, so that we do not get warnings/
errors for macro redefinition.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=701251
Include gdkwin32.h (which includes gdkprivate-win32.h and gdkwin32cursor.h
during the build of GDK-Win32) so that
gdk_win32_icon_to_pixbuf_libgtk_only() and
gdk_win32_pixbuf_to_hicon_libgtk_only() get exported, so that the GTK
DLL can link correctly.
Change the visibility handling to be the same way we do it in
GLib now. We pass -fvisibility=hidden to gcc and decorate public
functions with __attribute__((visibility("default"))).
This commit just does this for GDK, GTK+ will follow later.
This is another step towards making GdkDisplayManager backend-agnostic.
Most of the backends profit from this as their atom implementations
where generic anyway - x11 needed that to allow multiple X displays and
broadway, quartz and wayland don't have the concept of displays.
The X11 backend still did things, so I only #if 0'd some code but did
not actually update anything.
Rather than set the window update region and repaint this region
when we get a WM_PAINT we just directly add it to the update
region. No need to roundtrip via win32.
This lets us also make sure we do this drawing in the same update
cycle. This seems especially important on Win7, because ScrollDC
seems to act kind of weird there, not using bitblt in areas where
it seemingly could, which makes scrolling look really flashy.
http://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug-cgi?id=674051