The “xdg-output” protocol provides clients with the outputs size and
position in compositor coordinates, and does not provide the output
scale which is already provided by the core “wl_output” protocol.
So when receiving the wl_output scale event, we should update the scale
regardless of “xdg-output” support, otherwise the scale will remain to
its default value of 1 and the surface will be scaled up by the
compositor to match the actual output scale, which causes blurry fonts
and widgets.
Fixes: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gtk/issues/1901
Signed-off-by: Olivier Fourdan <ofourdan@redhat.com>
The change to keep some server resources around
until destroy was causing us to not recreate
the right things when a surface is hidden and
then shown again. Make sure to recreate everything.
The Wayland backend was dropping _all_ serverside
resources on hide, which is too early e.g. for
GtkGLArea which wants to use egl resources to
unload textures on unrealize.
Closes: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gtk/issues/1485
We were adding incomplete frame timings to the
profile, which lead to occasional nonsense
numbers. Instead, only add timings to the profile
once we marked them as complete. This also
gives us an opportunity to add the presentation
time as a marker.
Make find_grab_input_seat return a GdkWaylandSeat
instead of a struct wl_seat, so we can use it and
avoid calling gdk_display_get_default_seat when
we need to get a serial later.
Save the information whether the cursor in use is the default one, and
don't create a new cursor object in that case.
We previously created a new cursor object every frame just to compare it
to the current cursor in use and then throw it away.
The skip-taskbar, skip-pager and urgency hints were
only ever implemented for X11, and are not very useful
with modern desktops. Relegate the functionality to
x11 backend api, and drop the GtkWindow api.
And update the surface accordingly (eg. scale on hidpi). The mechanism
that did that for wl_pointer has been made generic so it can be shared
with tablets too.
Closes: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gtk/issues/1675
_gdk_wayland_cursor_get_buffer was not initializing
its out variables in the 'not found' case. This
was showing up in protocol traces as garbage hotspots
being sent to the compositor.
Closes: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gtk/issues/1328
Previously, the GDK backend for Wayland would deduce the logical size
of the monitors from the wl_output size and scale.
With the addition of fractional scaling which advertises a larger scale
value and then scale down the client surface, the computed logical size
of the monitors in GDK would be wrong and confuse applications which
insist on using the monitor size and position (like Firefox).
The xdg-output protocol aims at describing outputs in a way which is more
in line with the concept of an output on desktop oriented systems by
presenting the outputs using their logical size and position appropriately
transformed.
Add support for the optional xdg-output protocol so that the size and
position of the monitors as reported by GDK is correct even when using
fractional scaling.
Fixes: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gtk/issues/1828
Change the all the begin_drag and begin_move apis in
GdkSurface and GtkWindow to expect surface coordinates.
Update the x11 implementation to translate to root
coordinates where it matters. Wayland is ignoring the
coordinates anyway.
When the user approaches a tablet tool to the screen we get a proximity-in event
and in this moment we need to check the surface output scale to find the scaling
to be applied to the cursor.
And the same should be done when the tool is detached or the monitors
configuration changes.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gtk/issues/1675
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.
As per the spec:
> The back buffer can
> either be reported as invalid (has an age of 0) or it may be
> reported to contain the contents from n frames prior to the
> current frame.
So a buffer age of 1 means that the buffer was used in the last frame.
We were handling buffer_age==1 the same as buffer_age==0, i.e. we
returned the full damage for the surface.
[1] https://www.khronos.org/registry/EGL/extensions/EXT/EGL_EXT_buffer_age.txt
When we decide to fall back because the settings portal
is not present, adhere to that decision elsewhere. And
treat the fontconfig-timestamp like the other special-cased
settings, with G_TYPE_NONE.
Under Wayland, we are currently directly using GSettings
for desktop settings. But in a sandbox, we may not have
access to dconf, so this may fail. Use the new settings
portal instead.
As GSettings now supports session-specific defaults, GNOME Classic
no longer uses a separate schema and the decoration layout is always
determined by the regular schema.
This essentially reverts commit add67b516c (although the code was
moved since then).
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gtk/merge_requests/400