This test was failing in continuous, where the tests are running
in a VM with disabled animations. Make the test adapt to that
situation by changing the reference ui on the fly if we find
that animations are disabled.
After figuring out what the actual problem is, name the reftest
properly.
The actual problem is that the use-fallback property is ignored when
using an icon-name on GtkImage.
Fallback seems to be working in the GtkIconTheme test suite, but fails
in GtkImage itself.
This is a test for a bug in the Bluetooth settings. An icon named
"phone-apple-iphone" should fallback to "phone" if the
gnome-icon-theme-extras package isn't installed.
Previously, the unpremultiplied values from the GdkRGBA were taken. Now
we premultiply the color values as specified by the CSS specs.
This is only relevant when transitioning with translucent colors.
An example is the halfway transition between transparent (0, 0, 0, 0)
and white (1, 1, 1, 1). Previously, all 4 values where transitioned
separately and the result was semi-transparent gray (0.5, 0.5, 0.5,
0.5).
By depending on the alpha value, the result is now semi-transparent
white (1, 1, 1, 0.5) which is what one would naively expect.
New reftest: color-transition
GPUs generally have problems when you create a 35000px wide surface.
Luckily X catches this and sends a BadAlloc. Which GTK immediately
abort()s on.
Testcase included.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1163579
If a side of the box is 0px wide, make the corners owned by the adjacent
sides. This avoids spilling over of unwanted colors from the 0-width
side into the corner.
New test for this case is included.
After 3a337156d1 style lookups still used
the parent context's style as the parent style, even though after a
gtk_style_context_save() the root style of the style context is the
proper parent.
Testcase attached.
This fixes shadows that are animated not updating the clip of the widget
they are drawn on. An example of this are the buttons in the CSS shadows
example in gtk-demo.
Reftest included
Windows needs a shared library to link the modules against, otherwise
the undefined symbols make it not work.
So build a shared library on Windows.
We don't want a library elsewhere, as that just complicates things, so
we only make the library shared on Windows and keep it as a noinst
library otherwise.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=736338
This is a noinst library for now, but the idea is to turn it into a
proper DLL on Windows, so that we can install it and properly link the
modules to it. Windows doesn't allow undefined symbols in modules.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=736338
... just because there is no style context instantiated yet. Instead,
instantiate a style context during realize() and ask it.
Fixes problems with dim labels not being dimmed on first show.
Testcase included.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=735240
Just pretend that the main widget is an empty widget the size of the
overlay.
Makes it possible to write testcases where no size requests are run on
overlay widgets before size_allocate() is called.
Testcase included.
with non-installed tests the build would get an empty $(reftestdir)
which would screw up the LDFLAGS.
An rpath seems to be required to make libtool build a shared object.
Without an rpath line, it only builds a static object.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=735401
Make gtk-reftest consult the REFTEST_MODULE_DIR environment
variable to find out where to look for modules, and fix the
libtool hack to construct the .libs subdirectory correctly.
The previous code for computing the clip rectangle forgot to respect
the text-shadow CSS property. This is usually not very visible because
text shadows usually don't extend the ink rectangle by very much.
See attached testcase for an example.
The widget path code copies elements only in gtk_widget_path_copy() -
which is essentially unused - and in
gtk_widget_path_append_with_siblings() - which is used by GtkBox.
So stuff the widget we are testing in a GtkBox to reroduce the problem.