Instead of hardcoding the version number “0.0” it now uses the version
number from the Cogl source. The web address has been changed to
cogl3d.org.
Reviewed-by: Robert Bragg <robert@linux.intel.com>
(cherry picked from commit 5363e4a68da9811fb136a01b278846ce15913287)
• Fixes some overly long lines, hugging asterisks in the pointer type
declarations and indentation issues.
• Tidies up the GLSL source so that it will look nicer in the
debug output.
• Removes the backwards ‘parent_class’ define which hacks the
implementation of the G_DEFINE_TYPE macro and just uses the full
type name instead.
Reviewed-by: Robert Bragg <robert@linux.intel.com>
(cherry picked from commit 3ffe8979da4d4dc7deb221e5653b6f24f41b412c)
There were a few hugging pointer asterisks and inconsistent newlines for
a prototype which this patch tweaks.
Reviewed-by: Neil Roberts <neil@linux.intel.com>
(cherry picked from commit 488c074316b270b17d1000c68f26210108b1b0ca)
The experimental HW decode path was adapted from clutter-gst based on
some experimental gstreamer api. This path was disabled by upstream
gstreamer developers back in september last year due to instabilities.
Without understanding how the experimental api is implemented it seems
rather strange to be plucking out the GL handle of a cogl texture and
passing that to some unknown gstreamer code which would presumably
somehow have to use the same GL context as Cogl to be able to do
something with that texture. For now we can strip all of this unused
code and it would be easy enough to re-instate later if it's useful.
Reviewed-by: Neil Roberts <neil@linux.intel.com>
(cherry picked from commit 2a24cb9f2a283af87bb685b3e9c7e3af1ffeab6e)
CoglGst is a GStreamer integration library that facilitates
video playback using the Cogl API. It works by retrieving
each video frame from the GStreamer pipeline and attaching
it to a Cogl pipeline in the form of a Cogl texture along
with possible color model conversion shaders. The pipeline
is then retrieved by the user during each draw. An example
use of the CoglGst API is included in the examples directory.
Reviewed-by: Neil Roberts <neil@linux.intel.com>
(cherry picked from commit dfb94cf4b0b6b42d6465df362a0c0af780596890)
When determining whether a pipeline needs blending, it was previously
returning TRUE if the pipeline has no snippets, whereas it should be
the other way around because we can't determine the final colour when
there are snipets.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=702570
Reviewed-by: Robert Bragg <robert@linux.intel.com>
(cherry picked from commit 109c815bf747fe027a74f098b4fcb6ea4846a482)
We want any run-time warnings to cause the conformance tests to fail.
We are currently setting G_DEBUG in test_utils_init and this would
previously cause the fatal-warnings debug option to be set. However
since commit 47444dac of glib this no longer works because the
environment variable is read in a magic constructor of libglib so it
is too late to try to set it there. This patch makes it also set it in
run-tests.sh to avoid the problem.
Reviewed-by: Robert Bragg <robert@linux.intel.com>
(cherry picked from commit 95a6d962f5bc2f21bfcdb2f0bc6b55cfa28792b3)
Previously on GLES2 where there is no builtin point size uniform then
we would always add a line to the vertex shader to write to the
builtin point size output because when generating the shader it is not
possible to determine if the pipeline will be used to draw points or
not. This patch changes it so that the default point size is 0.0f
which is documented to have undefined results when drawing points.
That way we can avoid adding the point size code to the shader in that
case. The assumption is that any application that is drawing points
will probably have explicitly set the point size on the pipeline
anyway so it is not a big deal to change the default size from 1.0f.
This adds a new pipeline state flag to track whether the point size is
non-zero. This needs to be its own state because altering it needs to
cause a different shader to be added to the pipeline cache. The state
flags that affect the vertex shader have been changed from a constant
to a runtime function because they will be different depending on
whether there is a builtin point size uniform.
There is also a unit test to ensure that changing the point size does
or doesn't generate a new shader depending on the values.
Reviewed-by: Robert Bragg <robert@linux.intel.com>
(cherry picked from commit b2eba06e16b587acbf5c57944a70ceccecb4f175)
Conflicts:
cogl/cogl-pipeline-private.h
cogl/cogl-pipeline-state-private.h
cogl/cogl-pipeline-state.c
cogl/cogl-pipeline.c
The handler for ConfigureNotify events in the EGL X11 winsys was
incorrectly trying dereference the onscreen pointer even if it didn't
find an onscreen for the X window that has resized. This meant that if
the application has other windows that weren't created by Cogl then it
would crash when handling events for them.
Reviewed-by: Robert Bragg <robert@linux.intel.com>
(cherry picked from commit a0056df61903d74180d4e4caa1046e68396d1be0)
gnome-shell needs to know whether the stage window is focused so
it can synchronize between stage window focus and Clutter key actor
focus. Track all X windows, even those without MetaWindows, when
tracking the focus window, and add a compositor-level API to determine
when the stage is focused.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=700735
When we set the input focus, we first set the predicted window,
and then try to process focus events. But as XI_FocusOut on the
existing window comes before XI_FocusIn on the new window, we'll
see the focus out on the old window and think the focus is going
to nothing, which makes mutter think the prediction failed.
This didn't really matter as nothing paid attention to the focus
window changing, but with gnome-shell's focus rework, we'll try
and drop keyboard focus in events like these.
Fix this by making sure that we ignore focus window changes of our
own cause when updating the focus window field, by ignoring all
focus events that have a serial the same as the focus request or
lower. Note that if mutter doens't make any requests after the
focus request, this could be racy, as another client could steal
the focus, but mutter would ignore it as the serial was the same.
Bump the serial by making a dummy ChangeProperty request to a
mutter-controlled window in this case.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=701017
When the cursor visibility changes, we have to relayout the ClutterText
actor instead of just redrawing it - as the cursor changes the
PangoLayout size, a size request cycle is needed.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=702610
When the cursor visibility changes, we have to relayout the ClutterText
actor instead of just redrawing it - as the cursor changes the
PangoLayout size, a size request cycle is needed.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=702610
We substract one from the unredirect counter when enable_unredirect_for_screen
gets called. It is an unsigned integer so substracting one from zero (which means enable) would overflow and thus keep it peramently enabled.
This should never happen because it means there is an unmatched
enable / disable pair somewhere. So in addition to fixing it add a
warning when this case gets triggered.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=701224
While we still don't want to perform implicit transitions on unmapped
actors, we can relax the requirement on having been painted once; the
was_painted flag was introduced to avoid performing implicit transitions
on the :allocation property, but for that we can use the
needs_allocation flag instead, as needs_allocation will be set to FALSE
when we have been painted as well.
Thus, we retain our original goal of not having actors "flying" into
position on their first allocation, without the side effect of
preventing animations when emitting the ::show signal.
Add register constraints to prevent asm statement complaints like:
{standard input}:382: rdhi, rdlo and rm must all be different
Signed-off-by: Donn Seeley <donn.seeley@windriver.com>
Reviewed-by: Neil Roberts <neil@linux.intel.com>
There are two asm() statements in cogl-fixed.c that can't be assembled
in Thumb mode. This patch switches it to the generic code in Thumb
mode.
Signed-off-by: Donn Seeley <donn.seeley@windriver.com>
Reviewed-by: Neil Roberts <neil@linux.intel.com>
Previously when trying the three different texture types to create an
automagic texture it would handle the out-of-memory error specially
and bypass trying the remaining texture types. Presumably the idea is
that out-of-memory is a serious error and it can't be recovered from.
However, in the case of atlas textures, this error will be thrown if
the texture is too large to fit into an atlas. In that case it makes
sense to try another texture type so that it can fallback to using a
sliced texture. I think conceptually each different texture type will
have different memory requirements so it seems reasonable to try the
others if there is not enough memory for one of them.
This was causing cogl_texture_new_from_data to break when loading very
large textures because it wouldn't end up slicing them.
Reviewed-by: Robert Bragg <robert@linux.intel.com>
(cherry picked from commit ad6968135a01823eb6a94668dd22c7a4df6f9327)
This removes cogl-queue.h and adds a copy of Wayland's embedded list
implementation. The advantage of the Wayland model is that it is much
simpler and so it is easier to follow. It also doesn't require
defining a typedef for every list type.
The downside is that there is only one list type which is a
doubly-linked list where the head has a pointer to both the beginning
and the end. The BSD implementation has many more combinations some of
which we were taking advantage of to reduce the size of critical
structs where we didn't need a pointer to the end of the list.
The corresponding changes to uses of cogl-queue.h are:
• COGL_STAILQ_* was used for onscreen the list of events and dirty
notifications. This makes the size of the CoglContext grow by one
pointer.
• COGL_TAILQ_* was used for fences.
• COGL_LIST_* for CoglClosures. In this case the list head now has an
extra pointer which means CoglOnscreen will grow by the size of
three pointers, but this doesn't seem like a particularly important
struct to optimise for size anyway.
• COGL_LIST_* was used for the list of foreign GLES2 offscreens.
• COGL_TAILQ_* was used for the list of sub stacks in a
CoglMemoryStack.
• COGL_LIST_* was used to track the list of layers that haven't had
code generated yet while generating a fragment shader for a
pipeline.
• COGL_LIST_* was used to track the pipeline hierarchy in CoglNode.
The last part is a bit more controversial because it increases the
size of CoglPipeline and CoglPipelineLayer by one pointer in order to
have the redundant tail pointer for the list head. Normally we try to
be very careful about the size of the CoglPipeline struct. Because
CoglPipeline is slice-allocated, this effectively ends up adding two
pointers to the size because GSlice rounds up to the size of two
pointers.
Reviewed-by: Robert Bragg <robert@linux.intel.com>
(cherry picked from commit 13abf613b15f571ba1fcf6d2eb831ffc6fa31324)
Conflicts:
cogl/cogl-context-private.h
cogl/cogl-context.c
cogl/driver/gl/cogl-pipeline-fragend-glsl.c
doc/reference/cogl-2.0-experimental/Makefile.am
Previously CoglPipelineSnippetList was using the BSD embedded list
type with a mini struct to combine the list node with a pointer to the
snippet. This is effectively equivalent to just using a GList so we
might as well do that. This will help if we eventually want to get rid
of cogl-queue.h
Reviewed-by: Robert Bragg <robert@linux.intel.com>
(cherry picked from commit 54a168f3c7829c427d54ab517533bb9f7384d022)
The free function for atlas textures was previously always assuming
that there will be a valid sub_texture pointer but this might not be
the case if the texture was never successfully allocated. This was
causing Cogl to crash if the application tries to make a texture that
can not fit in the atlas using the automagic texture API.
Reviewed-by: Robert Bragg <robert@linux.intel.com>
(cherry picked from commit a7a8b7aefc8cb03fe8b716bee06b3449a7dba85f)
It looks like Cogl doesn't currently clean up an unallocated atlas
texture properly so if it fails to allocate it. It will then crash
when it is freed. This adds a conformance test to verify that all of
the various texture types can be freed without allocating them.
Reviewed-by: Robert Bragg <robert@linux.intel.com>
(cherry picked from commit bfada22d9a7f60baad5ae5615e45f10327e23e36)
Previously the unit tests were using libdl without directly linking to
it. It looks like this ends up working because one of Cogl's
dependencies ends up pulling adding -ldl via libtool. However in some
configurations it looks like this wasn't happening.
To avoid this problem we can just use GModule to resolve the symbols.
g_module_open is documented to return a handle to the ‘main program’
when NULL is passed as the filename and looking at the code it seems
that this ends up using RTLD_DEFAULT so it will have the same effect.
The in-tree copy of glib already has the code for gmodule so this
shouldn't cause problems for --disable-glib.
Reviewed-by: Robert Bragg <robert@linux.intel.com>
(cherry picked from commit b14ece116ed3e4b18d59b645e77b3449fac51137)
When setting the font using clutter_text_set_font_description(), the
font settings on a ClutterText actor can be reset when there is a dpi
changes signaled by the backend.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=702016
When setting the font using clutter_text_set_font_description(), the
font settings on a ClutterText actor can be reset when there is a dpi
changes signaled by the backend.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=702016
1ddef9576d87c98fafbcefe3108f04866630c2cd had its logic the
wrong way round, a gesture should begin as soon as the requested number
of touchpoints is reached. Correcting this fixes tap events
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=700980
When we changed the MetaGroup to handle internal effects, we updated
has_effects(), but forgot to fix the equivalent has_constrains() and
has_actions() method.
Now, if we clear the constraints or the actions on an actor, and we
call has_constraints() or has_actions(), we get an false positive.
This adds a new function to enable per-vertex point size on a
pipeline. This can be set with
cogl_pipeline_set_per_vertex_point_size(). Once enabled the point size
can be set either by drawing with an attribute named
'cogl_point_size_in' or by writing to the 'cogl_point_size_out'
builtin from a snippet.
There is a feature flag which must be checked for before using
per-vertex point sizes. This will only be set on GL >= 2.0 or on GLES
2.0. GL will only let you set a per-vertex point size from GLSL by
writing to gl_PointSize. This is only available in GL2 and not in the
older GLSL extensions.
The per-vertex point size has its own pipeline state flag so that it
can be part of the state that affects vertex shader generation.
Having to enable the per vertex point size with a separate function is
a bit awkward. Ideally it would work like the color attribute where
you can just set it for every vertex in your primitive with
cogl_pipeline_set_color or set it per-vertex by just using the
attribute. This is harder to get working with the point size because
we need to generate a different vertex shader depending on what
attributes are bound. I think if we wanted to make this work
transparently we would still want to internally have a pipeline
property describing whether the shader was generated with per-vertex
support so that it would work with the shader cache correctly.
Potentially we could make the per-vertex property internal and
automatically make a weak pipeline whenever the attribute is bound.
However we would then also need to automatically detect when an
application is writing to cogl_point_size_out from a snippet.
Reviewed-by: Robert Bragg <robert@linux.intel.com>
(cherry picked from commit 8495d9c1c15ce389885a9356d965eabd97758115)
Conflicts:
cogl/cogl-context.c
cogl/cogl-pipeline-private.h
cogl/cogl-pipeline.c
cogl/cogl-private.h
cogl/driver/gl/cogl-pipeline-progend-fixed.c
cogl/driver/gl/gl/cogl-pipeline-progend-fixed-arbfp.c
This ensures we only add a static_breadcrumb pointer to every
CoglPipeline when build with debugging enabled. Since applications may
allocate a lot of pipelines we want to keep the basic size of pipelines
(ignoring optional sparse state) down to a minimum.
Reviewed-by: Neil Roberts <neil@linux.intel.com>
(cherry picked from commit 4716312e14bc253cd174a22b3db9d2c9cf031fa1)
This moves the code in test-bitmask into a UNIT_TEST() directly in
cogl-bitmask.c which will now be run as a tests/unit/ test.
Reviewed-by: Neil Roberts <neil@linux.intel.com>
(cherry picked from commit 693c85e0cde8a1ffbffc03a5f8fcc1f92e8d0ac7)
Includes fix to build conform tests with -I$(top_builddir)/cogl to
be able to find cogl-gl-header.h
This adds a white-box unit test that verifies that GL_BLEND is disabled
when drawing an opaque rectangle, enabled when drawing a transparent
rectangle and then disabled again when drawing a transparent rectangle
but with a blend string that effectively disables blending.
This shares the test utilities and launcher infrastructure we are using
for conformance tests so we get consistent reporting and so unit tests
will be run against a range of different drivers.
This adds a --enable-unit-tests configure option which is enabled by
default but if disabled will make all UNIT_TESTS() into static inline
functions that we should expect the compiler to discard since they won't
be referenced by anything.
Reviewed-by: Neil Roberts <neil@linux.intel.com>
(cherry picked from commit 9047cce06bbf9051ec77e622be2fdbb96ed767a8)
This adds a test to make sure that if the same pipeline is used to draw
two primitives, one which doesn't need blending because it has an opaque
color associated, and another using a color attribute that requires
blending then Cogl should recognize that it needs to enable blending for
the second primitive even though the pipeline hasn't changed.
Reviewed-by: Neil Roberts <neil@linux.intel.com>
(cherry picked from commit c15d91f1c6293bebd4494d1e20586121483cddef)
Since _cogl_pipeline_update_blend_enable() can sometimes show up quite
high in profiles; instead of calling
_cogl_pipeline_update_blend_enable() whenever we change pipeline state
that may affect blending we now just set a dirty flag and when we flush
a pipeline we check this dirty flag and lazily calculate whether blender
really needs to be enabled if it's set.
Since it turns out we were too optimistic in assuming most GL drivers
would recognize blending with ADD(src,0) is equivalent to disabling
GL_BLEND we now check this case ourselves so we can always explicitly
disable GL_BLEND if we know we don't need blending.
This introduces the idea of an 'unknown_color_alpha' boolean to the
pipeline flush code which is set whenever we can't guarantee that the
color attribute is opaque. For example this is set whenever a user
specifies a color attribute with 4 components when drawing a primitive.
This boolean needs to be cached along with every pipeline because
pipeline::real_blend_enabled depends on this and so we need to also call
_cogl_pipeline_update_blend_enable() if the status of this changes.
Incidentally with this patch we now no longer ever use
_cogl_pipeline_set_blend_enable() internally. For now the internal api
hasn't been removed though since we might want to consider re-purposing
it as a public api since it will now not conflict with our own internal
state tracking and could provide a more convenient way to disable
blending than setting a blend string.
Reviewed-by: Neil Roberts <neil@linux.intel.com>
(cherry picked from commit ab2ae18f3207514c91fa6fd9f2d3f2ed93a86497)
Commit 4f2bb583bf8c changed things so that the compositor used
clutter_threads_add_repaint_func_full (CLUTTER_REPAINT_FLAGS_POST_PAINT
to get after-paint notification and send _NET_WM_FRAME_DRAWN, but this
doesn't actually work, since Clutter will already have blocked for
VBlank before calling post-paint functions.
The result is that frame synced toolkits like GTK 3.8 will normally
only be able to draw every other frame.
Since ::paint doesn't work either, a new function
clutter_stage_set_paint_callback() has been added to Clutter
(and will be included in the 1.14 branch)
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=698794
_cogl_egl_query_wayland_buffer was using _COGL_RETURN_IF_FAIL but the
function needs to return a CoglBool so it was giving a warning.
(cherry picked from commit d0290eb19fc9bf56fb24f8eab573e19966ea7e1a)