4bae7158d3
The responsibility of sendWindowSystemEvents() is to process events from the window system. Historially that logic was part of the QPA/QWS event dispatcher, which naturally also sent posted events. Through refactoring, the code at some point ended up in in the QWindowSystemInterface class, still with the posting of events in place. This resulted in QPA event dispatchers adopting a pattern of just calling sendWindowSystemEvents(), as that would cover both posted and window system events. Other event dispatchers would call sendWindowSystemEvents(), and then use a base-class implementation from QtCore for processing events, resulting in two calls to QCoreApplication::sendPostedEvents() per iteration of processEvents(). This breaks the contract that processEvents will only process posted events that has been queued up until then. We fix this entanglement by removing the sendPostedEvents() call from QWindowSystemInterface::sendWindowSystemEvents() and move it to the respective event dispatchers. For some EDs it means an explicit call to sendPostedEvents, while others were already doing sendPostedEvents though a separate source (GLib), or using a base-class (UNIX/BB), and did not need an extra call. We still keep the ordering of the original sendWindowSystemEvents() function of first sending posted events, and then processing any window system events. Task-number: QTBUG-33485 Change-Id: I8b069e76cea1f37875e72a034c11d09bf3fe166a Reviewed-by: Paul Olav Tvete <paul.tvete@digia.com> |
||
---|---|---|
.. | ||
auto | ||
baselineserver | ||
benchmarks | ||
global | ||
manual | ||
shared | ||
README | ||
tests.pro |
This directory contains autotests and benchmarks based on Qt Test. In order to run the autotests reliably, you need to configure a desktop to match the test environment that these tests are written for. Linux X11: * The user must be logged in to an active desktop; you can't run the autotests without a valid DISPLAY that allows X11 connections. * The tests are run against a KDE3 or KDE4 desktop. * Window manager uses "click to focus", and not "focus follows mouse". Many tests move the mouse cursor around and expect this to not affect focus and activation. * Disable "click to activate", i.e., when a window is opened, the window manager should automatically activate it (give it input focus) and not wait for the user to click the window.