Before this patch, we'd always allocate a full size SHM buffer via
the wl_shm_pool, even though it would never be used. Instead allocate a
logical 1x1 cairo image surface.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=745076
In order to support window scales for EGL windows, resize the
wl_egl_window to the window dimension multiplied with the window scale,
just as with SHM window buffers.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=745076
When the preferred surface scale changes, for example when entering a
wl_output with a higher scale than any previous entered output, recreate
the shm surface and redraw the window content with the new window scale.
Before this patch, the internal scale would be changed, but the shm
surface would not be recreated given the new scale, i.e. we'd attach a
buffer for a different scale than wl_surface.set_scale specified.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=745076
If the compositor is too old for handling surface buffer scales, never
tyr to set change it. This will effectively always leave it to its
initial state, i.e. 1.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=745076
Don't try to paint onto an error surface. This happens for example when
gdk_cairo_set_source_pixbuf() is called with a pixbuf that is too big
for Cairo to handle.
Spotted by Christian Boxdörfer
If a scrollbar is not shown (because of policies, or because it isn't
necessary), it doesn't make sense to start fade animations on its window
on captured motion events.
This was added a few years ago, as a way to have _no_ im context
at all. But it didn't actually work. Make it work, and streamline
the handling of none by moving it all to gtkimmodule.c.
As part of this, add context to the translated names of all
im modules we ship.
In order to provide a constant mtime between OS build and deploy time,
while also maintaining a hardlink content-addressed model independent of
timestamps, ostree sets all mtimes to 0.
The icon cache code currently ignores directories with mtime 0, assuming
they don't exist.
Track directory existence in a more precise way.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=745052
When loading SVGs from ICON_THEME_DIR_UNTHEMED GtkIconInfos,
such as those created for a GLoadableIcon, the size of the pixbuf to
load is set as a product of icon_info->scale.
But a few lines above, icon_info->scale is set to -1 for
ICON_THEME_DIR_UNTHEMED GtkIconInfos, so we'll end up always passing a
negative size to the GdkPixbuf loader, which is interpreted as the
nominal size of the image file.
Instead load the SVG at the desired scaled size in that case.
This fixes blurry icon in the notification panel in gnome-shell.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=744991
When loading a GResource-backed GFileIcon into a GtkIconInfo we
currently fail to populate the is_resource private field.
Also, since is_svg is set by looking at the filename, and
g_file_get_path() returns NULL for a GResourceFile, is_svg was always
FALSE.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=744991
Add a way to set a delay factor that can be used
to make the long press more or less sensitive.
Making this a factor instead of exposing the delay
itself preserves the value of the setting as an
overall 'slow down long press' setting.
As Sebastian pointed out, just resetting the initial slider
position was an incomplete fix, because it does not cause the
delta to be recomputed, which is important in this scenario,
because you've likely travelled some distance over the slider
before the long press kicks in.
Instead, explicitly record both the slider position and the
delta.
We record the starting position on button press, but only
start the zoom mode when the long press timeout kicks in.
Depending on circumstances, this can cause a noticable jump.
Avoid this by resetting the recorded starting position after
the long press timeout. Suggested by Sebastian Keller.
First, attributes can be NULL (which is always the case when calling
gdk_window_ensure_native) so do not unconditionally dereference it.
Then the window_type should be taken directly from the GdkWindow as
in other backends (such as the X11 one for example).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=744942