Many parts of GTK+ assume that all windows have a cairo surface
assoicated with them. This change provides a logically 1x1 cairo surface
(respecting scale) for the root window.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=704554
If we bind to a global with an higher version than implemented, or
we make requests that appeared in a later version, we would get
fatal wayland errors.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=704104
With the introduction of the use of buffer scaling in ed4fcee4ct we
must request version 3 of the compositor as that is the version of the
surface interface that adds this new functionality. See the following
commit in weston:
commit a85118c1b85df6fbf8f896dca971a5b79a94da71
Author: Jason Ekstrand <jason@jlekstrand.net>
Date: Thu Jun 27 20:17:02 2013 -0500
Use wl_resource_create() for creating resources
This commit sets the version numbers for all added/created objects. The
wl_compositor.create_surface implementation was altered to create a surface
with the same version as the underlying wl_compositor. Since no other
"child interfaces" have version greater than 1, they were all hard-coded to
version 1.
Signed-off-by: Jason Ekstrand <jason@jlekstrand.net>
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=703817
Ths allows the retrieval of the wl_surface before the window is shown.
The surface is still created in the original places since the surface
and shell surface is destroyed when the surface is programmatically
hidden.
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.
We track the list of outputs each window is on, and set the
scale to the largest scale value of the outputs. Any time the scale
changes we also emit a configure event.
We bind to the newer version of the wl_output which supports
the new done and scale events, and if we use this to get the
scale for each monitor (defaulting to 1 if not supported).
If we got the release event for the last buffer then we're
fine with writing directly to the window surface, as wayland
will not be looing at it. This saves us from allocating
and copying more data.
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.
When we call _gdk_wayland_display_load_cursor_theme during
the initial opening of the first display, gdk_setting_get does
not work yet, since it relies on the default display/screen
being set, which only happens after open returns.
Instead, just use the screen of this display.
There is currently no Wayland protocol for providing presentation
timestamps or hints about when drawing will be presented onscreen.
However, by assuming the straightforward algorithm used by the
DRM backend to Weston, we can reverse engineer the right values.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=698864
Combine duplicate code for creating and destroying surfaces.
To make the operation of the destroy() operation more obvious, the
destruction of the (fake) root window at display dispose time is
changed to not be a "foreign" destroy.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=698864
Use wl_surface_frame() to get notification when the compositor paints
a frame, and use this to throttle drawing to the compositor's refresh
cycle.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=698864
Lazily creating the cairo surface that backs a window when we
first paint to it means that the call to
gdk_wayland_window_attach_image() in
gdk_wayland_window_process_updates_recurse() wasn't working the
first time a window was painted.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=698864
When exposing an area, we were individually damaging and committing
each rectangle, *before* drawing. Surprisingly, this almost worked.
Order things right and only commit once.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=698864
This makes Wayland and X11 no longer call into XKB and libX11 for these
functions but use GDK's own copy of these functions, just like the
win32, quartz and broadway backends.
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.
In the case that the client is started directly by the compositor the
WAYLAND_SOCKET environment variable is set containing the fd to use that was
created by a socketpair.
This environment variable is consumed by a call to wl_display_connect so a
second call will not take advantage of it.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=697673