Is't been deprecated since Mac OS X 10.5.
Task-number: QTBUG-74872
Change-Id: I8b1ad7aca6448883cb164fd0c4b329592ca60548
Reviewed-by: Edward Welbourne <edward.welbourne@qt.io>
Reviewed-by: Alexandru Croitor <alexandru.croitor@qt.io>
Reviewed-by: Tor Arne Vestbø <tor.arne.vestbo@qt.io>
People tend to "turn off debug and release builds" by just not building
one of the variants. For example, Qt's own rcc is built in release only,
however it is configured for debug_and_release with the same TARGET for
both.
Let qmake complain about conflicting TARGETs only we're about to build
all of those conflicting targets, i.e. if build_all is set.
Change-Id: I0448bf5cb421e2d801d3cc30e0d80353fba0d999
Reviewed-by: Friedemann Kleint <Friedemann.Kleint@qt.io>
Reviewed-by: Oliver Wolff <oliver.wolff@qt.io>
It is conceivable that during the try-compare loop of processing
windowing system events we loose and regain the focus. That would
explain the occasional test failure where instead of the expected 3
focus in events, we have received four.
Task-number: QTBUG-77769
Change-Id: I2221440d09a74d4d18a72f7786232b4491cf45a8
Reviewed-by: Tor Arne Vestbø <tor.arne.vestbo@qt.io>
(cherry picked from commit 56f084781e)
Reviewed-by: Edward Welbourne <edward.welbourne@qt.io>
It is finite and normal; it classifies as a zero; and it should not be > qfloat16(0).
Added tests to match.
Change-Id: I7874fb54f622b4cdf28b0894050ad3e75cf5d77c
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
Its limits() test was rather large and had some overlap with an older
qNan() test, that needed some clean-up (it combined qfloat16 values
with double and float values in ways that caused qfloat16 to be
promoted to another type, so we weren't testing qfloat16).
Renamed the qNan() test to qNaN(), separated out the parts of it that
actually tested infinity. Moved various parts of limits() to these and
rationalised the result. Split out a properties() test from limits()
for the properties of the qfloat16 type that are supplied by its
numeric_limits. Split out a data-driven finite() test to cover some
repeated code that was in limits() and extended it to test more
values. Added more tests of isNormal().
Fixed my earlier UK-ish spelling of "optimise", in the process, and
identify the processor rather than the virtualization as the context
where the compiler errs.
Change-Id: I8133da6fb7995ee20e5802c6357d611c8c0cba73
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
As usual, keep some QVector overloads around to allow Qt Quick to compile.
Color attachments and vertex input bindings get an at(index) type of
accessor, unlike any other of similar lists. This is because there the
index is significant, and sequential iteration is not the only type of
operation that is performed. Sometimes a lookup based on an index will
be needed as well.
Task-number: QTBUG-78883
Change-Id: I3882941f09e94ee2f179e0e9b8161551f0d5dae7
Reviewed-by: Christian Strømme <christian.stromme@qt.io>
Reviewed-by: Paul Olav Tvete <paul.tvete@qt.io>
Forcing users to go through a QVector, when in practice they almost
always want to source the data from an initializer list, a QVarLengthArray,
or a plain C array, is not ideal. Especially since we can reason about
the maximum number of elements in the vast majority of use cases for all
the affected lists. QRhiResource is also not copyable so we do not need
the usual machinery offered by containers. So switch to a
QVarLengthArray.
Note that a resource is not a container. The only operations we are
interested in is to be able to source data either via an initializer
list or by iterating on something, and to be able to extract the data,
in case a user wishes to set up another resource based on the existing
one.
In some cases a QVector overload is kept for source compatibility with
other modules (Qt Quick). These may be removed in the future.
Also do a similar QVector->QVarLengthArray change in the srb-related
data in the backends.
Change-Id: I6f5b2ebd8e75416ce0cca0817bb529446a4cb664
Reviewed-by: Christian Strømme <christian.stromme@qt.io>
One of our compilers for emscripten coerces all signaling NaNs to
quiet ones, so won't do any actual signaling. Anyone relying on them
to do so shall be disappointed, so it's better that they know about it
at compile-time - or, at least, have the ability to find it out.
Put the signaling NaN producers (and remaining (test) code using them)
under the control of a feature that's disabled when numeric_limits
claims double has no signaling NaN. Assume the bootstrap library
doesn't need signaling NaNs. Sadly, until C++20 <bit>, there's no
contexpr way to test that alleged signalling and quiet NaNs are
actually distinct.
Added some auto-tests for signaling NaN, including that it's distinct
from quiet NaN. Any platform on which the last fails should disable
this feature.
Task-number: QTBUG-77967
Change-Id: I57e9d14bfe276732cd313887adc9acc354d88f08
Reviewed-by: Joerg Bornemann <joerg.bornemann@qt.io>
Revert surfacePixelSize() to be a getter only. With Metal this will
mean returning the "live" layer size (and so not the
layer.drawableSize), which is in line with what we expect with other
backends.
Instead, we leave it to the swapchain's buildOrResize() to "commit"
the size by setting drawableSize on the layer. With typical
application or Qt Quick logic this ensures that layer.drawableSize is
set once and stays static until we get to process the next resize - on
the rendering thread.
This of course would still mean that there was a race when a client
queries surfacePixelSize() to set the depth-stencil buffer size that
is associated with a swapchain. (because that must happen before
calling buildOrResize() according to the current semantics)
That can however be solved in a quite elegant way, it turns out,
because we already have a flag that indicates if a QRhiRenderBuffer is
used in combination with (and only in combination with) a
swapchain. If we simply say that setting the UsedWithSwapChainOnly
flag provides automatic sizing as well (so no setPixelSize() call is
needed), clients can simply get rid of the problematic
surfacePixelSize() query and everything works.
Task-number: QTBUG-78641
Change-Id: Ib1bfc9ef8531bcce033d1f1e5d4d5b4984d6d69f
Reviewed-by: Tor Arne Vestbø <tor.arne.vestbo@qt.io>
It can be important to see for example the adapter enumeration that is
printed when qt.rhi.general is enabled. Make it enabled by default in
the tests.
Change-Id: I7bd073781e176d9b17b5386c548e9f8a2e16c10f
Reviewed-by: Christian Strømme <christian.stromme@qt.io>
The test was found crashing with software rendering in Qt 5.7.
Removing the insignification revealed that there are failures
on WinRT as well, blacklist them for the moment.
Task-number: QTBUG-78802
Fixes: QTBUG-49630
Change-Id: Ib1a3efe69d7b63cdd98c6da364ab09e0e2dbdf62
Reviewed-by: Tony Sarajärvi <tony.sarajarvi@qt.io>
Some AMD CPUs (e.g. AMD A4-6250J and AMD Ryzen 3000-series) have a
failing random generation instruction, which always returns
0xffffffff, even when generation was "successful".
This code checks if hardware random generator generates four consecutive
equal numbers. If it does, then we probably have a failing one and
should disable it completely.
Change-Id: I38c87920ca2e8cce4143afbff5e453ce3845d11a
Fixes: QTBUG-69423
Reviewed-by: Edward Welbourne <edward.welbourne@qt.io>
This will also cause clearing to 0,0,0,0.
Essential in order to allow fast testing of window transparency
issues in combination with QRhi and the various backends.
Change-Id: Iee2763c1d06f1d3e5d59a9142abaf30fab1dc543
Reviewed-by: Christian Strømme <christian.stromme@qt.io>
With OpenGL a scissor (or viewport) rectangle is not allowed to have a negative
width or height. Everything else is allowed. This is also the semantic we wish to
keep for QRhiViewport and QRhiScissor.
This raises some problems. For instance, when we do bottom-left - top-left
rectangle conversion, the case of partially out of bounds rects needs to be
taken into account.
Otherwise, Qt Quick ends up in wrong scissoring in certain cases, typically when
the QQuickWindow size is decreased so the content does not fit because that will
then start generating negative x, y scissors for clipping (which is perfectly
valid but the QRhi backends need to be able to deal with it)
Then there is the problem of having to clamp width and height carefully, because
some validation layers for some APIs will reject a viewport or scissor with
partially out of bounds rectangles.
To verify all this, add a new manual test, based on the cubemap one. (cubemap was
chosen because that is an ideal test scene as it fills the viewport completely, and
so it is visually straightforward when a scissor rectangle is moving around over it)
Fixes: QTBUG-78702
Change-Id: I60614836432ea9934fc0dbd0ac7e88931f476542
Reviewed-by: Christian Strømme <christian.stromme@qt.io>
The fix for QTBUG-35203 set the Alt+Right shortcut on the next
button, clobbering the Alt+N shortcut from parsing the text (similar
for other languages). Add a separate shortcut for Alt+Right since a
button may not have several shortcuts.
Amends 6714196f45.
Fixes: QTBUG-78604
Change-Id: I1367da739c35fbd011d11f850c9bc3915113c644
Reviewed-by: Oliver Wolff <oliver.wolff@qt.io>
The error was due to a compiler optimization bug, which is fixed
in 16.3.0.
This reverts commit 305f2c3aa6.
Fixes: QTBUG-77239
Change-Id: Idfb86ad5c3ec026518f0713c41f7ad744ab4d5db
Reviewed-by: Mårten Nordheim <marten.nordheim@qt.io>
Due to their sandboxed nature, UWP applications do not have access to
system settings like time zone.
Fixes: QTBUG-71185
Change-Id: I567a255f8adc18838fff79b81210faa094674722
Reviewed-by: Edward Welbourne <edward.welbourne@qt.io>
Separate quiet NaN from infinity and expand the nan-with-payload test
to a general test that bits outside the exponent don't break qIsNan().
Generally test more thoroughly and systematically.
Tests for signalling NaN shall follow.
Change-Id: Ib35dabacc8ebcc9a0761df38f6f419f0398d0e20
Reviewed-by: Erik Verbruggen <erik.verbruggen@me.com>
Testlib's signaldumper functionality would crash inside
testlib as it dereferenced the sender after it was deleted.
Change-Id: I6013b75b0a121e2768429d8a3cf0339a940314f2
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@qt.io>
Cleanup QTreeView autotest:
- use range-based for loops
- use nullptr
- use member initialization
- use new signal/slot syntax
- use static invocations / replace with QTRY_foo() calls
- use override
- use QStyledItemDelegate
Change-Id: I0e2d023254ed9f6f5d94cebf4d4358351cc4c3e2
Reviewed-by: Friedemann Kleint <Friedemann.Kleint@qt.io>
Cleanup QTreeWidget autotest:
- use range-based for loops
- use nullptr
- use member initialization
- use new signal/slot syntax
- use static invocations
- use override
Change-Id: I2c07e95871d8725366cddd5cd098010709c8dc55
Reviewed-by: Friedemann Kleint <Friedemann.Kleint@qt.io>
The requirement to separate debug and release DLLs on Windows stems from
the Visual Studio C run-time library appearing in two different variants
(debug and release) and not mixing well. It's possible to perform builds
without optimzations and with debug symbols while linking against the
release version of the C run-time, but at the same time the debug
version of the run-time brings other developer visible advantages.
MinGW on the other hand does not have this distinction, does not ship
with separate DLLS and does also not require the VS C runtime library.
Therefore we do not need this separation for MinGW, which means that our
packages can be reduced in size and application developers wishing to
debug their applications do not have to use debug builds of the Qt
libraries or run into Qt internal debug code.
Task-number: QTBUG-78445
Change-Id: Idf588606091298dc44262c4c89e689df18d34747
Reviewed-by: Cristian Adam <cristian.adam@qt.io>
Reviewed-by: Jörg Bornemann <joerg.bornemann@qt.io>
Those values must be scaled to device coordinates - otherwise borders,
margins etc. will be too small when rendered on high dpi devices
(printers etc.).
This change will add the scaling to those values.
QTextDocument::print applies 2cm margins to the root frame of a
unpaginated QTextDocument. Those margins were previously scaled to
device coordinates in order to give the correct result. But because
scaling is now done inside QTextDocumentLayout that scaling must be
removed and pixel values based on qt_defaultDpi are provided instead.
Fixes: QTBUG-78318
Change-Id: I6fe6dcc25f846341f6a2fe5df2f54baea473fdfd
Reviewed-by: Shawn Rutledge <shawn.rutledge@qt.io>
If the domain passed down is an actual TLD that's the subject of a *
rule, e.g. "ck" subject to *.ck, then we were finding no dot in it and
concluding that it couldn't be the subject of a * rule.
Added a test for the specific .ck case and commented on where we could
get some canonical test data that I tripped over while researching
this. Cross-reference the cookie-jar test from the QUrl test, too.
Fixes: QTBUG-78097
Change-Id: Id858a9dae22e6b306a68df3fc199e0160f537159
Reviewed-by: Mårten Nordheim <marten.nordheim@qt.io>
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
The DefaultFontFallbacks.plist system file that we used for looking up
style fallbacks does not exists in macOS 10.15, nor did it ever exists
on iOS. Instead of relying on this file, we hard-code a set of default
families, that we then look up the fallbacks for.
The result of QFont::defaultFamily() on macOS is now:
QFont::Helvetica --> "Helvetica"
QFont::Times --> "Times New Roman"
QFont::Courier --> "American Typewriter"
QFont::OldEnglish --> ""
QFont::System --> "Lucida Grande"
QFont::AnyStyle --> "Lucida Grande"
QFont::Cursive --> "Apple Chancery"
QFont::Monospace --> "Menlo"
QFont::Fantasy --> "Zapfino"
And on iOS:
QFont::Helvetica --> "Helvetica"
QFont::Times --> "Times New Roman"
QFont::Courier --> "American Typewriter"
QFont::OldEnglish --> ""
QFont::System --> "Helvetica"
QFont::AnyStyle --> "Helvetica"
QFont::Cursive --> ""
QFont::Monospace --> "Menlo"
QFont::Fantasy --> "Zapfino"
Fixes: QTBUG-78240
Change-Id: Ie9bc13c9c1031d89f024199e4736a046c568a48d
Reviewed-by: Simon Hausmann <simon.hausmann@qt.io>
Since 9c8d1ca18b, the test would fail
when High DPI scaling is enabled:
FAIL! : tst_QWidget::translucentWidget() Compared QImages differ in device pixel ratio.
Actual (actual): 2
Expected (expected): 1
.\tst_qwidget.cpp(8913) : failure location
Set the device pixel ratio on the expected pixmap to fix this.
Change-Id: I517495931c2c6b1f49125bb4b5836e304bdbf545
Reviewed-by: Oliver Wolff <oliver.wolff@qt.io>
Cleanup QTableView autotest:
- use range-based for loops where possible
- use nullptr
- use member initialization
- use new signal/slot syntax
- remove a lot of c-style casts
- use static invocations
- use override
- instantiate objects on stack instead heap to avoid memleaks
Change-Id: I52fee26697b1732afa9f965e600d4c59551370ce
Reviewed-by: Friedemann Kleint <Friedemann.Kleint@qt.io>
Reviewed-by: Edward Welbourne <edward.welbourne@qt.io>
There is no year 0 in the proleptic Gregorian calendar, so QDate()
won't be happy if asked for a date in it. Tweak scanning of the data
we get from MS-Win so as to avoid a date calculation that could
otherwise happen in year 0 when constructing
QDateTime(QDate(1, 1, 1), QTime(0, 0, 0), QTimeZone("Australia/Sydney")).
Added a test for this case, which Oliver Wolff has kindly verified
does reproduce the assertion failure. However, Coin is unable to
reproduce, as all its MS builds are configured with -release, so
Q_ASSERT() does nothing. (The relevant code then skips over year 0,
albeit for the wrong reasons, and gets the right results, albeit
inefficiently, leaving no other symptom by which to detect the
problem.)
Fixes: QTBUG-78051
Change-Id: Ife8a7470e5bd450bc421e89b3f1e1211756fc889
Reviewed-by: Qt CI Bot <qt_ci_bot@qt-project.org>
Reviewed-by: Oliver Wolff <oliver.wolff@qt.io>
Reviewed-by: Volker Hilsheimer <volker.hilsheimer@qt.io>
...if there is one and the concept is applicable in the first place.
Change-Id: Iab202c1c1cdd229f4910159de4cae7ce30805ea9
Reviewed-by: Christian Strømme <christian.stromme@qt.io>
The device can be lost when physically removing the graphics adapter,
disabling the driver (Device Manager), upgrading/uninstalling the
graphics driver, and when it is reset due to an error.
Some of these can (and should) be tested manually, but the last
one has a convenient, programmatic way of triggering: by triggering
the timeout detection and recovery (TDR) of WDDM. A compute shader
with an infinite loop should trigger this after 2 seconds by default.
All tests in tests/manual/rhi can now be started with a --curse <count>
argument where <count> specifies the number of frames to render before
breaking the device. Qt Quick will get an environment variable with
similar semantics in a separate patch.
Change-Id: I4b6f8d977a15b5b89d686b3973965df6435810ae
Reviewed-by: Christian Strømme <christian.stromme@qt.io>
Results on my machine:
PASS : tst_QReadWriteLock::writeOnly(QMutex)
RESULT : tst_QReadWriteLock::writeOnly():QMutex:
3,607 msecs per iteration (total: 3,607, iterations: 1)
PASS : tst_QReadWriteLock::writeOnly(QReadWriteLock)
RESULT : tst_QReadWriteLock::writeOnly():QReadWriteLock:
39,703 msecs per iteration (total: 39,703, iterations: 1)
PASS : tst_QReadWriteLock::writeOnly(std::mutex)
RESULT : tst_QReadWriteLock::writeOnly():std::mutex:
3,697 msecs per iteration (total: 3,697, iterations: 1)
PASS : tst_QReadWriteLock::writeOnly(std::shared_mutex)
RESULT : tst_QReadWriteLock::writeOnly():std::shared_mutex:
5,727 msecs per iteration (total: 5,727, iterations: 1)
PASS : tst_QReadWriteLock::writeOnly(std::shared_timed_mutex)
RESULT : tst_QReadWriteLock::writeOnly():std::shared_timed_mutex:
5,921 msecs per iteration (total: 5,921, iterations: 1)
(the 'nothing' test of course doesn't work with writing, as writing to
the same QString from different threads is UB)
Change-Id: Ia78b54963a51eaf6563ce0d243316a3337056a83
Reviewed-by: Olivier Goffart (Woboq GmbH) <ogoffart@woboq.com>
Reviewed-by: Mårten Nordheim <marten.nordheim@qt.io>
Cleanup QTableWidget autotest:
- use range-based for loops where possible
- use nullptr
- use member initialization
- use new signal/slot syntax
- remove a lot of C-style casts
- use static invocations
- use override
- instantiate objects on stack instead of heap to avoid memleaks
Change-Id: I99ed144caab88d648d5ab987ce0963fbc6f1197d
Reviewed-by: Friedemann Kleint <Friedemann.Kleint@qt.io>
The test is not failing anymore on QEMU targets.
This partially reverts commit
71bd06d516.
Fixes: QTBUG-71915
Change-Id: I68593edf0ec245e14879833c8aa90661a3c2e227
Reviewed-by: Liang Qi <liang.qi@qt.io>
BT.2020 is an HDR color space and its luminance range doesn't match
that of the rest of the currently available color spaces. Without
support for white-point luminance in 5.14, there would be a behavior
change when luminance support is later introduced, so it is better to
remove it now, and reintroduce it when the necessary handling of
different luminance levels is available.
Change-Id: Ie29e4dd757faae3ac91d4252e1206acce42801dc
Reviewed-by: Tor Arne Vestbø <tor.arne.vestbo@qt.io>
This was accidentally introduced by
2f33e030b8 and since manual tests are not
built by default, was not discovered earlier.
Change-Id: I5cb6d5cfe0911bdb01a33014f2648a47b7a48848
Reviewed-by: Volker Hilsheimer <volker.hilsheimer@qt.io>
QShortcut::event() did not call the base class implementation
QObject::event() which caused that e.g. QEvent::DeferredDelete was not
handled.
Fix it by calling QObject::event() when the event was not handled.
Fixes: QTBUG-66809
Change-Id: Ideebc980bc658f8f2b9ec4417e738bccda5eeab5
Reviewed-by: Volker Hilsheimer <volker.hilsheimer@qt.io>
And let the meat of the function be shared with the rbSwap routine.
Change-Id: I0ea18b30c26ff050c17dcb3ad4d654bfbb8c6221
Reviewed-by: Eirik Aavitsland <eirik.aavitsland@qt.io>
The enum OptimizationFlag::DontClipPainter is deprecated and not used in
the code since Qt4 times. Therefore also mark it as deprecated so it can
be removed with Qt6
Change-Id: I318a55cf42e7a233d13d4ec0144e1977251f5c92
Reviewed-by: Oliver Wolff <oliver.wolff@qt.io>