Some of the flags got lost in the meson transition or were demoted from
error flags to warning flags.
This commit reintroduces them.
It also includes fixes for the code that had warnings with those flags.
The big one being -Wshadow.
Using an empty `configuration_data` object to copy a configuration file
is deprecated since Meson 0.47 (released July 2018); the equivalent
behaviour is available by using `copy: true`.
The existing post-install shell script will most likely not work on
Visual Studio builds as there is normally no shell interpreter installed
on the system where the build is done, but the build is normally done in
a standard Windows cmd.exe console.
Instead, use a Python script so that it will work on the platforms that
Python supports.
This meson port is not upstream yet, so a wrap file is not included.
Upstream has expressed interest but the port hasn't been tested on all
platforms yet. Will be added when it gets upstreamed.
Link to WIP port: https://github.com/centricular/harfbuzz
* A bunch of new variables for config.h.meson
* A check for aligned allocation being necessary at all
(graphene must use GCC vector instructions or SSE2)
* A check for C malloc() being aligned at 16-byte boundaries
* A check for a few special aligned allocator functions being
present and not being built-ins (posix_memalign is a builtin
in GCC, even on platforms where there is no posix_memalign
system function)
* Added -mstackrealign flag on Windows, since otherwise
stack variables may become unaligned when the stack briefly
passes through OS code (such as in various callbacks and
handlers)
The header linux/input.h used by GDK is specific to Linux. It is
possible to get a few Linux headers on FreeBSD by installing v4l_compat,
but it is usually better to use the one shipped with FreeBSD.
We prefer dev/evdev/input.h to linux/input.h here, so it will always use
dev/evdev/input.h on FreeBSD regardless of v4l_compat.
https://svnweb.freebsd.org/changeset/ports/465644
This commit adds support the stable version of the xdg-shell protocol.
Support for the last version of the unstable series is left intact, but
will not receive new features.
The stable version is prioritized above the older version.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=791939
Instead of hard-coding linker flags for a specific operating system and
a specific compiler, we can should cc.links to test them, so they can be
used on more operating systems and compilers.
All of the four platform-dependent backends are enabled by default. It
is usually a good default because it requires users to explicitly choose
backends they want to use. Rules in meson.build also automatically
disable unavailable backends for macOS, Windows, Linux, so users on
these 3 major platforms don't have to manually disable things when
running meson commands.
However, meson.build doesn't do the same thing for other Unix-like
systems, which is acceptable but not ideal. To make it easier to build
GTK+ on these systems, the Linux case, which enables X11 and Wayland and
disables Win32 and Quartz, is made the default for all operating systems
that are not Windows or macOS.
This commit also changes most 'host_machine.system()' calls to os_*
variables, which are easier to read and less likely to be used wrongly.
Instead of going through an ancillary script to strip away the
`WL_EXPORT` annotation from the generated code, we should bump up the
required version of Wayland, and use the `private-code` argument for
wayland-scanner, which does the right thing for us.
The demos are now built as GUI programs, which will require the presence
of WinMain() on Visual Studio builds, unless we specify the entry point.
Pass the /entry:mainCRTStartup linker flag on Visual Studio builds for
the demo programs so that they can link properly.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=773299
Examples are not like demos; the latter are installed, and provide a
Flatpak manifest for CI pipelines and GNOME Builder. We should not be
using a single configure time option to gate building both.
We forgot to account for the case where we lookup for HarfBuzz manually
under Visual Studio builds, so only set HAVE_HARFBUZZ (and thus
HAVE_PANGOFT, since PangoFT2 depends on HarfBuzz) after we did the
fallback check for HarfBuzz.
Also, check for hb.h instead of harfbuzz/hb.h to be inline with the
pkg-config case, as the sources also include the HarfBuzz header by
using #include <hb.h>, not #include <harfbuzz/hb.h>
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=773299
Check for freetype2 version, because pangoft works with any version
(pangoft availability does not indicate that ft2 is new enough), unlike
GTK.
On Windows, since pangoft is optional, we check for the presence of
freetype2 .pc file first after finding that we have pangoft, and then
check for FT_Get_Var_Design_Coordinates() manually by looking for the
freetype headers and .lib first, and then looking for the presence of
that symbol, since freetype2's Visual Studio build system does not
generate a .pc file for us.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=773299
Meson warns when doing that, as it's not really portable.
Since we're using platform-specific linker flags on Darwin, we can also
do the same on Linux; the syntax is GCC-specific, so we're going to need
Clang users to test it.
This way, we can support external libraries providing implementations of
GtkMediaFile.
We also add a media backend called 'nomedia' that can be enabled to not
compile any support for GtkMediaFile. This is useful when people want to
statically compile GTK into an application that does not use media.
For now, this option is the default.
We also support a new environment variable GTK_MEDIA that allows
selecting the implementation to use.
GTK_MEDIA=help can be used to get info about the available
implementations.
This makes demos be compiled/linked before tests. And that means that
while hacking, I can already run widget-factory when the tests are
still linking.
Release builds should only disable cast checks, to match what we used
to do back with the Autotools builds.
The Autotools build had an "--enable-debug=no" option, but that was
rarely used; Meson has debug, debugoptimized, release, and plain build
types, but we considered the "release" build types as the old "disable
all debugging code", which is not really accurate.
Disabling assertions and preconditon checks should be left to people
with constrained environments and/or packagers; they are supposed to
use the "plain" build type, and override the CFLAGS themselves.
Drop the 'enable-' prefix, and always enable all platform-specific
backends. We can disable them depending on the platform. This way,
the documentation printed by `meson configure` remains accurate.
Instead of having separate options for each print backend, we can use
the same approach as the input method modules: a single option, with a
comma-separated list of print backends.
The standard Vulkan SDK ships with a pkg-config file, like a modern
library should.
We should fall back to finding the library and header only for platforms
where pkg-config is not really a thing.
Based on a patch by: Daniel Stone <daniels@collabora.com>
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=793181