Move it from GdkDisplayManagerX11.init to GdkDisplay.class_init.
This shouldn't cause any problems, but who knows, so keep this patch
small.
Reason for this is the unification of display managers.
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 commit is very similar to 8c8853a1f5
We update the keynames.txt file from gdkkeynames.h, and we update
keynames-translate.txt to include all the keysym names that we want
to have translations for. Also strip the XF86 from the translatable
keysym names, since we are returning those names now from
gdk_keyval_name().
keyname-table.h is regenerated from these updated files.
Instead of GdkDisplay::init, only add the display to the display manager
in GdkDisplay::opened. This avoids spurious changes of the default
display in gtk_init() when we're trying to find the one that works and
try to open lots of different ones.
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.
A function was doing nothing but calling a function that was in its own
source file doing nothing but calling a function in its own source file
that did nothing.
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.