Make the RecordWindow method also understand the 'cursor-mode' property.
For 'embedded' the cursor is drawn onto the pixel buffer using cairo,
otherwise it works similarly to how RecordMonitor deals with it.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/413
To be used to translate absolute cursor positions to relative positions,
as well as to determine whether a cursor sprite is inside the stream or
not. It also helps calculating the scale the cursor sprite needs to be
scaled with to be in stream coordinate space.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/413
As the stream size is the logical monitor size multiplied with the ceil
of the logical monitor scale, the corresponding logical size, which is
what should be passed via the size property on the D-Bus object, should
be the logical monitor size.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/413
Make the monitor implementation do things strictly related to its own
source type, leaving the Spa related logic and cursor read back in the
generic layer, later to be reused by the window source type
implementation.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/413
We might fail to page flip a new buffer, often after resuming, due to
the FIFO being full. Prior to this commit, we handled this by switching
over to plain mode setting instead of page flipping. This is bad because
we won't be synchronized to the refresh rate anymore, but just the
clock.
Instead, deal with this by trying again until the FIFO is no longer
full. Do this on a v-sync based interval, until it works.
This also changes the error handling code for drivers not supporting
page flipping to rely on them returning -EINVAL. The handling is moved
from pretending a page flip working to explicit mode setting in
meta-renderer-native.c.
Fixes: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/issues/460
A renderer view will, under the native backend, since long ago always
have a logical monitor associated with it, so remove the code handling
the legacy non-stage view case.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/issues/460
Prior to this commit, MetaWaylandSurface held a reference to
MetaWaylandBuffer, who owned the texture drawn by the surface. When
switching buffer, the texture change with it.
This is problematic when dealing with SHM buffer damage management, as
when having one texture per buffer, damaged regions uploaded to one,
will not follow along to the next one attached. It also wasted GPU
memory as there would be one texture per buffer, instead of one one
texture per surface.
Instead, move the texture ownership to MetaWaylandSurface, and have the
SHM buffer damage management update the surface texture. This ensures
damage is processed properly, and that we won't end up with stale
texture content when doing partial texture uploads. If the same SHM
buffer is attached to multiple surfaces, each surface will get their own
copy, and damage is tracked and uploaded separately.
Non-SHM types of buffers still has their own texture reference, as the
texture is just a representation of the GPU memory associated with the
buffer. When such a buffer is attached to a surface, instead the surface
just gets a reference to that texture, instead of a separately allocated
one.
Fixes: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/issues/199
When we freed the cursor GPU state including the gbm_bo objects attached
to it, we didn't unset the cursor renderer private of the CRTCs of the
associated GPU. This means that HW cursor invalidation could potentially
break if a new gbm_bo happened to be allocated at the same memory
address as the previous one.
To avoid this, iterate through the CRTCs of the GPU of which the cursor
data is freed, and unset the cursor renderer private if it was the one
destroyed.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/issues/199
The signal handler must return TRUE as the invocation is already handled
by returning an error. Also update the error message a bit to clarify
that the API exists only for testing purposes.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/457
We should not only take the old CRTC for an output whenever
possible, but we should also assign one that is 'free', i.e.
one that another monitor (to be processed after this one)
isn't using, so that that monitor can use the same CRTC.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/issues/373
We shouldn't change an output's CRTC if we don't have to, as
that causes the output to go black.
This patch depends on
"monitor-unit-tests: initial crtcs in custom_lid_switch".
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/issues/373
This means we need to make sure we don't accidentally free the provided
source GError (which automatically happens with `g_autoptr`), so use
`g_steal_pointer()`.
This fixes an issue where, when launched in a bubblewrap environment
(such as the one provided by Buildstream), mutter would give the
following warning message:
```
mutter-WARNING **: 8:31:35:069: Can't initialize KMS backend: (null)
```
... which isn't that useful when trying to debug the actual issue.
Iterate over all the monitor product words to check for a partial matching on
EDID, otherwise we would hang inside an infinite while loop.
Fixes https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/issues/459
The helper function from gdbus-codegen broadcasts the signal emission,
but we really only care about sending it to the specific peer that
created the session. Thus, only emit the signal to the particular peer
that owns the session.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=784199
If the extension is missing, the GPU copy path would not work. The code sets
the error, but forgets to return a failure. Fix this.
While adding the necessary return FALSE, also destroy the EGL context we just
created. Code refactoring shares the destroying code.
Found by reading code.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/416
If the GPU copy path would use a software renderer, fall back to the CPU
copy path. The CPU copy path is possibly faster and avoids screen
corruption issues that were observed on an Intel Haswell desktop. The
corruption was likely due to texturing from an unfinished rendering or
memory caching issues.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/325
Print the pixel format chosen for an output on a secondary GPU for
debugging. Knowing the format can aid in debugging e.g. red/blue channel
swaps and CPU copy performance issues.
This adds a DRM format printing helper in meta-crtc-kms.h. This header
is included in most native backend files making it widely available,
while DRM formats are specific to the native backend. It could be shared
with Wayland bits, DRM format codes are used there too.
The helper makes the pixel format much more readable than a "%x".
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/341
When setting up an output on a secondary GPU with the CPU copy mode,
allocate the dumb buffers with a DRM format that is advertised supported
instead of hardcoding a format.
Particularly, DisplayLink devices do not quite yet support the hardcoded
DRM_FORMAT_XBGR8888. The proprietary driver stack actually ignores the
format assuming it is DRM_FORMAT_XRGB8888 which results the display
having red and blue channels swapped. This patch fixes the color swap
right now, while taking advantage if the driver adds support for XBGR
later.
The preferred_formats ordering is somewhat arbitrary. Here it is written
from glReadPixels point of view, based on my benchmarks on Intel Haswell
Desktop machine. This ordering prefers the format that was hardcoded
before.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/341
These functions allow inspecting which pixel formats a CRTC's primary
plane supports. Future patches will inspect the supported formats and
pick a framebuffer format accordingly instead of hardcoding a format.
The copy list function will be used to initialize a formats list, and
the supports format function will be used to intersect that list against
another CRTC's supported formats.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/341
This avoids having to hardcode the same fallbacks elsewhere multiple
times when determining what formats might be suitable for a set of
CRTCs. The formats_modifiers hash table is now guaranteed to be
populated with at least something, so future code will not need to
handle it being empty.
The hardcoded fallback formats are a minimal set probably supported by
most hardware. XRGB8888 is the format that, according to ancient lore,
all DRM devices should support, especially if they don't have the
capability to advertise otherwise. Mutter also hardcodes XRGB8888 as the
GBM surface format, so it is already required on primary GPUs.
XBGR8888 matches the most common OpenGL format, sans alpha channel since
scanout hardware has not traditionally supported alpha. XBGR8888 is here
also because Mutter hardcodes that format for secondary GPU outputs when
using the CPU copy path.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/341
If the IN_FORMATS property is not found, copy the formats from the DRM
plane instead. This is the fallback for getting a list of formats the
primary plane supports when DRM universal planes capability is enabled.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/341
Rather than picking just one format, parse and store all the formats and
their modifiers.
This gives us a list of supported formats (and modifiers) on a CRTC
primary plane. Later I will be using this list to choose a framebuffer
format instead of hardcoding it.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/341
It scaled the logical monitor rect with scale to get the stream
dimensions, but that is only valid when having
'scale-monitor-framebuffers' enabled. Even when it was, it didn't work
properly, as clutter_stage_capture_into() doesn't work properly with
scaled monitor framebuffers yet.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/415
Commit 25f416c13d added additional compilation warnings, including
-Werror=return-type. There are several places where this results
in build failures if `g_assert_not_reached()` is disabled at compile
time and the compiler misses a return value.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/issues/447
Shell is using these, which was revealed by
1bbb5c8107 breaking its build when
generating its introspection due to meta_startup_notification_get_type()
not being found.
We keep the class structs private, so in practice MetaStartupSequence
and MetaBackend can't be derived from (the are semi-private).
Make meson link libmutter using -fvisibility=hidden, and introduce META_EXPORT
and META_EXPORT_TEST defines to mark a symbols as visible.
The TEST version is meant to be used to flag symbols that are only used
internally by mutter tests, but that should not be considered public API.
This allows us to be more precise in selecting what is exported and what is
not, without the need of a version-script file that would be more complicated
to maintain.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/395
MonitorManager was inheriting from MetaDBusDisplayConfigSkeleton, this was
causing introspection to see this like a GDBus skeleton object exposing to
clients methods that were not required.
Also, this required us to export meta_dbus_* symbols to the library, while
these should be actually private.
So, make MetaMonitorManager to be just a simple GObject holding a skeleton
instance, and connect to its signals reusing most of the code with just few
minor changes.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/395
As with the commits earlier, this also adds const qualifiers where
expected. However, the const variables are casted to non-const variants
so they can be passed to glib functions that take non-const variants but
expect const-like input.