239280f855
With server-side buffer allocation, buffers may be returned out of order (e.g. they may be held onto by external references or hardware). As such we may see older buffers the frame after we discard the history from seeing a very young buffer. To overcome this we want to keep the history in a ring so we can keep track of older entries without keeping an unbounded list. After converting to a ring, the maximum buffer age observed during testing was 5 (expected value of 4), but before we could see ages as high as 9 due to the huge latency spikes caused by doing full buffer redraws (compounded by external listeners doing readback on the damaged areas, for example vnc, drm/udl, prime). For this reason, a maximum age of 16 was chosen to be suitably large enough to prevent these worst cases from taxing the system. v2: Fix off-by-one in combining the damage histroy into the clipping rectangle, and apply copious whitespace fixes. Bugzilla: https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=745512 References: https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=724788 References: https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=669122 |
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clutter | ||
doc | ||
examples | ||
po | ||
tests | ||
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autogen.sh | ||
ChangeLog.pre-git-import | ||
clutter.doap | ||
configure.ac | ||
COPYING | ||
Makefile.am | ||
NEWS | ||
README.in | ||
README.md |
Clutter
What is Clutter?
Clutter is an open source software library for creating fast, compelling, portable, and dynamic graphical user interfaces.
Requirements
Clutter currently requires:
On X11, Clutter depends on the following extensions:
- XComposite
- XDamage
- XExt
- XInput 2.x
- XKB
If you are building the API reference you will also need:
If you are building the additional documentation you will also need:
- xsltproc
- jw (optional, for generating PDFs)
If you are building the Introspection data you will also need:
Resources
The official Clutter website is:
http://www.clutter-project.org/
The API references for the latest stable release are available at:
https://developer.gnome.org/clutter/stable/
The Clutter Cookbook is available at:
https://developer.gnome.org/clutter-cookbook/
New releases of Clutter are available at:
https://download.gnome.org/sources/clutter/
To subscribe to the Clutter mailing lists and read the archives, use the Mailman web interface available at:
https://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/clutter-list
New bug page on Bugzilla:
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/enter_bug.cgi?product=clutter
Clutter is licensed under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public
License, version 2.1 or (at your option) later: see the COPYING
file
for more information.
Building and Installation
To build Clutter from a release tarball, the usual autotool triad should be followed:
- ./configure
- make
- make install
To build Clutter from a Git clone, run the autogen.sh
script instead
of the configure one. The autogen.sh
script will run the configure script
for you, unless the NOCONFIGURE
environment variable is set to a non-empty
value.
See also the BuildingClutter page on the wiki.
Versioning
Clutter uses the common "Linux kernel" versioning system, where even-numbered minor versions are stable and odd-numbered minor versions are development snapshots.
Different major versions break both API and ABI but are parallel installable. The same major version with differing minor version is expected to be ABI compatible with other minor versions; differing micro versions are meant just for bug fixing. On odd minor versions the newly added API might still change.
The micro version indicates the origin of the release: even micro numbers are only used for released archives; odd micro numbers are only used on the Git repository.
Contributing
If you want to hack on and improve Clutter check the HACKING
file for
general implementation guidelines, and the HACKING.backends
for
backend-specific implementation issues.
The CODING_STYLE
file contains the rules for writing code conformant to
the style guidelines used throughout Clutter. Remember: the coding style
is mandatory; patches not conforming to it will be rejected by default.
The usual workflow for contributions should be:
- Fork the repository
- Create a branch (
git checkout -b my_work
) - Commit your changes (
git commit -am "Added my awesome feature"
) - Push to the branch (
git push origin my_work
) - Create an Bug with a link to your branch
- Sit back, relax and wait for feedback and eventual merge
Bugs
Bugs should be reported to the Clutter Bugzilla at:
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/enter_bug.cgi?product=clutter
You will need a Bugzilla account.
In the report you should include:
- what system you're running Clutter on;
- which version of Clutter you are using;
- which version of GLib and OpenGL (or OpenGL ES) you are using;
- which video card and which drivers you are using, including output of glxinfo and xdpyinfo (if applicable);
- how to reproduce the bug.
If you cannot reproduce the bug with one of the tests that come with Clutter source code, you should include a small test case displaying the bad behaviour.
If the bug exposes a crash, the exact text printed out and a stack trace obtained using gdb are greatly appreciated.