Now all events structs are private, it doesn't make as much sense
having GdkEventPrivate wrapping allocating events. This is a first
step towards removing it.
It won't stand true anymore that the GdkEventType argument is the
first field of the GdkEvent* structs. All callers have been updated
to use event->any.type instead.
Instead of just passing the GdkContentFormats, we are now passing the
GdkContentProvider to gdk_drag_begin().
This means that GDK itself can now query the data from the provider
directly instead of having to send selection events.
Use this to provide the private API gdk_drag_context_write() that allows
backends to pass an output stream that this data will be written to.
Implement this as the mechanism for providing drag data on Wayland.
And to make this all work, implement a content provider named
GtkDragContent that is implemented by reverting to the old DND
drag-data-get machinery inside GTK, so for widgets everything works just
like before.
We now have a GdkX11Display::xevent signal that gets emitted for every
XEvent and allows you to interrupt processing via TRUE/FALSE return
values.
These return values to correspond to GDK_FILTER_REMOVE and
GDK_FILTER_CONTINUE respectively.
The GDK_FILTER_TRANSLATE case from gdk_window_add_filter() is now meant
to be handled via gdk_display_put_event().
This is in preparation for DND.
It moves a lot of code from gdkclipboard-x11.c to
gdkselectionoutputstream-x11.c to untangle it from GdkX11Clipboard
usage.
Instead, pass the actions as part of gdk_drag_begin() and insist DND is
always managed.
A new side effect is that gdk_drag_begin() can now return %NULL.
This is the replacement for selection usage.
Backend implementations for X11 (missing support for backwards compat
formats like COMPOUND_TEXT) and Wayland are included.
GTK code should be adapted to use gdk_drop_read_*() functions instead
of gtk_drag_get_data().
When the reply to a TARGETS request comes in, the clipboard may already
be reclaimed by the local app. Deal with that case (in an ugly way,
strictly speaking we should use a cancellable here).
This happens for example at startup when the initial TARGETS requests
have not been answered until after the main widow popped up. And if such
a window immediately claims the primary clipboard (like when the initial
focus is inside an entry), this race will happen.
This object tracks the SelectionNotifyEvent that has to be sent in
response to a SelectionRequest.
Currently it just looks like code reshuffling, but it's a prerequisite
for handling MULTIPLE, which requires to only send the notify after
every stream has writtten at least once.
But anyway, code is cleaner now, so it's a win!
(1) Try all passed in formats in order if one of them fails.
(2) Don't blindly accept all formats, make sure they are mime types
(3) Add a bunch of special non-mime types that plug converters to
get to mime types
This allows us not just to pass any mime type to the read function, but
it also makes it possible to pass multiple mime types and the clipboard
can then try them in order until it finds a supported one.
This is so far not implemented though.
Turns out, way too many async operations are implemented by running the
sync operation in a thread. The easiest solution is to support that is
to use a GAsyncQueue for the buffers and deadlock if called from the
main thread.
(1) Turn X11 clipboard event handling into a regular filter function
(2) Maintain a timestamp in the clipboard, so we can pass it when
querying selections.
Make sure the API reflects the idea that GdkContentFormats is a set
containing mime types. In particular, treat the object itself as a
plural - it's named content format`S' after all - and therefor use
the correct verb form.
Also make GdkContentFormats keep an array instead of a list, now that
it's immutable.