When capture_view* functions are called with the paint flag set
to TRUE, we need to setup the framebuffer, however this was
happening after setting up the viewport, while the viewport
needs the framebuffer to be valid when calling cogl_set_viewport.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=791809
On VT switch, the xkb state layout index is lost and reset to the first
group, so if the first layout is not the last one being used, the xkb
state used in both meta-wayland-keyboard.c and clutter/evdev will be
desynchronized with the keyboard source indicator in the gnome-shell UI.
Save the effective layout chosen along with the seat so it can be
restored when reclaiming devices.
Use the saved layout index from the clutter/evdev's seat to restore the
layout in meta-wayland-keyboard, so that switching VT doesn't reset the
layout and causes further discrepancies with the layout indicator in the
gnome-shell UI.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=791383
Adds a set of convenient functions that can be shared between x11 input
device backends (namely core-x11 and xi2) to control XKB accessibility
features.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=788564
Implementing keyboard accessibility in clutter means we need to be able
to notify higher layers of possible modifier masks or setting changes
(as some keyboard accessibility can be disabled or enabled by keyboard).
For this purpose, add two new signals:
ClutterDeviceManager::kbd-a11y-mods-state-changed
ClutterDeviceManager::kbd-a11y-flags-changed
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=788564
Use a set of bitwise enum flags to set different keyboard accessibility
features and the necessary vfunc hooks in clutter input device so that
keyboard preferences can be passed to different input device
implementations.
The idea is to be able to configure either the clutter own
implementation of keyboard accessibility for evdev, or eventually
configure AccessX from the X11 clutter input device using the same
mechanism.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=788564
On X11, when AccessX is enabled, all X11 clients benefit from the
AccessX features, including gnome-shell/mutter, meaning that special
keys like the overview or other shortcuts are also affected.
To achieve the same in Wayland, we need to implement the same features
in clutter main rather than the Wayland backend, so that all depending
code within the compositor but also Wayland clients (which rely on the
compositor to get keyboard events) similarly benefit from the
accessibility features.
Add hooks to the clutter main loop to be able to implement such
features.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=788564
We'll need a way to trigger a bell from within clutter for keyboard
accessibility features, add the necessary hooks to be able to call a
backend bell-notify method.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=788564
The capture_into() function wrote out of bounds when capturing from a
non-origin view (not positioned at (0,0)). At the time of
implementation, this API was used to capture pixels across views into a
single data buffer, but the way it's used, and the way views may work
now, makes this impossible to do properly.
So remove the ability to capture into a pre-allocated buffer from
multiple views, and complain if the passed rectantgle overlapps with
multiple views. This removes the broken offset calculation all
together, fixing the bug motivating this change.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=787715
The reverted commit seems to cause
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=787240 for some reason. Lets
be safe and revert it for now, as the code freeze is just around the
corner.
This partly (it doesn't reintroduce a whitespace issue) reverts commit
dbc63430d8.
Add API similar to clutter_stage_capture() but that draws into
externally allocated memory. It is assumed that the pixel format is
ARGB32, and the memory is structured in a way that the width of the
passed rectangle is identical to the stride divided by 4.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=784199
If CLUTTER_CURRENT_TIME is passed, let the backend find an appropriate
time stamp representing the current time in the clock that is used by
that backend.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=784199
When suspending (i.e. VT switching away, the GDM gnome-shell instance
gets hidden, or changing user), destroy the onscreen and offscreen
monitor framebuffers. When resuming, the stage views and framebuffers
will be recreated anyway.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=786299
Message was poking stage_x11, which doesn't exist in this context.
Just print the Window that is receiving the event, the event will be
emitted into the only existing stage anyway.
Adds basic support for the "wheel" event from the Wayland tablet protocol.
Ideally we would accumulate the angle and report a wheel event with an
appropriate value for "clicks". We can get away with a much cruder method
for the time being, however, since no Wacom tablet puck actually provides
a smooth scrollwheel. Checking whether the angle in CLUTTER_INPUT_AXIS_WHEEL
exceeds a nominally-small threshold is sufficient to determine that the
wheel has advanced by at least one physical click.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=783716
These events will be useful on gnome-shell UI, so translate the
4-5 button events with exotic axes to those. Also use the
XI_Motion event received when first touching those to reset
the ring/strip state, so we don't receive spurious direction
changes in the upper layers.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=782033
When fractional scaling is used, damage and paint clip region is tracked
in stage coordinate space using integers might end up missing some
pixels when the border ends up on half pixels. Change the damage
tracking and clip regions to be in buffer coordinates so we can align
damage on physical pixel borders.
However, just using rounding up to the next physical pixel results in
glitches. To avoid this, extend the damage by one logical pixel in all
directions, but still (scissor) clip the drawing to the non-extended
region, as otherwise drawing the damaged regions will result in
incorrect pixels on the right and bottom edges of the clip region. It is
possible that there are better ways to do this, which can be explored in
the future.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=765011
We always hit non-fractional floats here because the stage views are
always made so that they are aligned on integer positions with integer
sizes, but there is no reason to go float -> int -> float when
calculating the viewport.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=765011
Make clutter_stage_capture() work if views are scaled. This needs
adaptations on the using side to deal with the cairo surface device
scale that is used to communicate the scale used when capturing.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=765011
To support fractional scaling, change the stage view scale to be a
float instead of an int. Also change the places where it is retrieved
and used when scaling things.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=765011
Previously gnome-shell listened on the Xft Xsettings via GTK+s
GtkSettings to get the font DPI setting. The Xsetting might not
be what we want, and we should not rely on Xsettings when we don't need
to, so lets manage it ourself.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=765011
These should be set one, but just set the master to be the slave
pad device. We are passively grabbing the pad device, so this is
consistent with active grabs on slave devices. Besides, pads are
paired to the VCP, which is not really truthful.
Fixes inoffensive warnings when trying to check whether motion
throttling applies for these events.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=784881
When building against a glib-genmarshal from GLib 2.54 we can use the
`--prototypes` command line argument to generate the prototypes for the
marshallers in the C source, and avoid a missing-prototypes compiler
warning.
Since commit 5cb5baa7d4, we skip transitions when updating an
actor's scale/position to the existing value. As a result, we
don't get change notification on those properties either - given
that the properties did not actually change, that behavior seems
fine, so just modify the test to not expect a notify signal for
unchanged properties.
Commit 0fd9e38175 fixed setting the out parameter for the x coordinate
when using the X11 backend, but broke compilation when the backend is
not available ...
Really fix the issue by running the X11-specific code when the X11
backend is available and in use, and display the one-time warning
otherwise.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=781902
GLib now generates the prototypes for the generated marshallers, so it's
not necessary to include the header any more.
This fixes a build failure in GNOME Continuous with GLib master, caused
by -Werror=redundant-decls.
Due to an accidental swap of an else statement and a preprocessor #else,
the output x coordinate is currently only set when not using the X11
windowing system, whoops.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=781902
Window scaling is a clutter feature used to enable automatic scaling of
stage windows when running under as an application in windowing system.
Clutter in mutter does not support running as a stand-alone application
toolkit, so lets remove this unused feature.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=777732
This commit adds the ability to set a scale on a scale view. This will
cause the content in the stage view to be painted with the given scale,
while still keeping the configured layout on the stage. In effect, for
a stage view with scale 'n', this means the framebuffer of a given stage
will 'n' times larger, keeping the same size on the stage.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=777732
Clutter's evdev input backend has no support for setting double
click timeout set by gnome-settings-daemon. This results in
touchpad click events timing out on wayland, because the
default timeout value wasn't enough.
This patch moves timeout setting to mutter and removes X11
backend specific setting from clutter.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=771576
This will be used to invert the transform in the nested mode, making it
possible to test offscreen texture based transform using the nested
backend.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=779745
In order to minimize the amount of breakage, while at the same time
making it easier to make backward incompatible changes needed to
continue turning libmutter into a capable Wayland compositor, make the
libmutter and friends (libmutter-clutter, libmutter-cogl*) parallel
installable by adding a version number to the name. This changes
various filenames, for example what previously was libmutter.so is now
libmutter-0.so (assuming the version for now is 0), and
libmutter-clutter-1.0.so is now libmutter-clutter-0.so. The pkg-config
filenames and GObject introspection has been renamed to reflect this as
well.
This enables a downstream compositor rely on a specific version of the
libmutter API, while gracefully handling API/ABI changes by having to
update to the new version at their own pace.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=777317
When != 0, this property will express the W:H ratio of the desired
output area (be it one monitor or the span of all monitors). At
the time of translating coordinates, coordinates will be skewed so
that the input area of the tablet is a rectangle of the given ratio.
Events happening in the input areas that fall outside the output
aspect ratio will be clamped to the nearest coordinate in the rect.
If the ratio is 0, the whole input area of the tablet will be used
and no coordinate skewing will happen.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=774115
And transform absolute events using this matrix. This property is
akin to the "Coordinate Transformation Matrix" property in X11,
and will be used to map tablets/touchscreens to outputs, favoured
over the libinput matrix which is meant for calibration.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=774115
Clutter assumed seat0 which is most usually, but not always correct.
Add an evdev-backend specific function to allow passing the seat
that will be used for ClutterDeviceManager construction, which we
already obtain in MetaLauncher.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=778092
Since both the libinput event source and the key repeat timer have the
same priority, the order in which both handlers are called is
arbitrary if both sources are ready on the same poll return. This
means that sometimes we generate key repeats when there's already a
real key event queued on libinput that would cancel the repeat timer
if only it was processed before.
One solution would be lowering the repeat timer source priority a
notch lower than the libinput source but that would mean that a steady
stream of events from libinput (e.g. pointer device motion) would
prevent any key repeats to happen.
Instead, we can fix this problem by trying to dispatch libinput from
the key repeat timer and checking if the timer source has been
destroyed before generating more key repeats.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=774989
Commit 9214d5029c changed the notify*
API to use microseconds and we already have a microsecond time source
here so we can use the timestamp directly without losing resolution at
this layer.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=774989
This is implemented using Wacom-driver specific properties at
the moment, until libinput becomes the fallback driver handling
tablet and pad management.
Whenever a tool becomes in proximity, a new ClutterInputDeviceToolXI2
will be created (if it wasn't created previously) for the given
serial number. This tool will be set in all events send from the
device.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=773779
Stylus configuration (stylus buttons, pressure) was handled
at the very high level, doing the button and pressure translations
right before sending these to wayland clients.
However, it makes more sense to store these settings into the
ClutterInputDeviceTool itself, and have clutter apply the config
at the lower level so 1) the settings actually apply desktop-wide,
not just in clients and 2) X11 and wayland may share similar
configuration paths. The settings are now just applied whenever
the tool enters proximity, in reaction to
ClutterDeviceManager::tool-changed.
This commit moves all handling of these two settings to
the clutter level, and removes the wayland-specific paths
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=773779
We do so whenever a tool enters or leaves proximity. We now also
ensure that last_tool is NULL after it leaves proximity, although
the CLUTTER_PROXIMITY_OUT event itself should still contain tool
information.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=773779
We most notably handle button events (acquired through a passive grab on
all device buttons) which are translated to CLUTTER_PAD_BUTTON* events,
so there is generic handling of pad actions on X11.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=773779
Commit 5fbb479301 was wrong too. What we
really want to do here is getting view relative coordinates given the
view's and the rectangle's global coordinates so we need to subtract
the view's origin from the rectangle's.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=771502
Commit a4fb7ef5a3 dropped translations of our internal cogl/clutter
forks, which broke the local-based text direction support. Instead
of bringing back translations just for this purpose, we can re-use
GTK's translations which use the same technique.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=771549
Now with the existance of offscreen view framebuffers the buffer age
damage regions are only valid if the view in question doesn't doesn't
have an intermediate offscreen. So, for views that doesn't have buffer
age, return the dirty pixel (0,0).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=770672
When blitting an offscreen onto an onscreen, the whole offscreen should
always be drawn on the whole onscreen. Thus, don't try to convert
between coordinate spaces, just draw the whole offscreen on the whole
onscreen.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=770672
Clutter discards any motion event if next event happens to also be a
motion event. This is problematic when the motion event carries
relative motion deltas, since the information about them is completely
lost.
Until we have moved away made the stage stop discarding motion events,
lets work around the issue by compressing them, effectively adding
multiple relative motion deltas together, would one be discarded.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=771049
The rectangle passed to capture_view() is in stage coordinate space;
thus, to translate to framebuffer coordinate space, the origin need to
be translated by the view layout position.
This fixes capturing views not at position (0, 0).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=770127
Absolute pointer events used the X coordinate as both X and Y. This
caused the pointer cursor to be moved incorrectly for absolute pointer
devices, commonly used in virtual machines.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=770557
"Blit" the result on the framebuffer after each view is painted.
This of course only applies if there is an offscreen buffer to
perform any blitting. Otherwise the onscreen framebuffer is rendered
to directly and this step is not necessary.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=745079
The offscreen is given through the ::back-buffer property, the ClutterStageView
will set up the the CoglPipeline used to render it back to the "onscreen"
framebuffer.
The pipeline can be altered through the setup_pipeline() vfunc, so ClutterStageView
implementations can alter the default behavior of blitting from offscreen to
onscreen with no transformations.
All getters of "the framebuffer" that were expecting to get an onscreen have
been updated to call the right clutter_stage_view_get_onscreen() function.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=745079
Various clutter test directly use cogl symbols, so they should be linked
against mutter-cogl as well.
Signed-off-by: Sjoerd Simons <sjoerd.simons@collabora.co.uk>
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=769636
This is somewhat gross at the moment, because we're after all mimicking
real keyboard events, we can only lookup keycodes that are available
in the current map, and the control of levels is rather limited.
Eventually, we want to implement the text_input protocol, handle these
events separately to MetaWaylandKeyboard, so event->key.keyval is
is guaranteed to be the final result. Until then, this is the farthest
we can get.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=765009
Evcodes don't cut it when we have something already specifying the
character to be printed, despite the current group/level. This API
allows some more control on the intended output.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=765009
libinput does it for us, but only for physical devices. When we add
virtual devices to the same seat, we need to track button press count
ourself.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=765009
Virtual input devices aim to enable injecting input events as if they
came from hardware events. This is useful for things such as remote
controlling, for example via a remote desktop session.
The API so far only consists of stumps.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=765009
Depending on clutter_input_device_get_mapping(), or whether the current
tool is either cursor or lens (those don't make any sense in absolute
mode), relative motions will be reported.
This function call only applies to tablets, and thus will error
out unless it's called with CLUTTER_TABLET_DEVICEs. This will
allow setting absolute/relative mapping on those on the fly, as
this is optional.
This will only be practical for pads (and maybe generic buttonsets in
the future?), we just need to know the number as the events will also
contain a number as the identificator.
Those map closely what we get from libinput. Button events have
been made its own separate struct, its semantics fall somewhere
in between of ClutterButtonEvent and ClutterKeyEvent, so is better
emitted as its own set.
Currently the setter doesn't take ownership of the value, but dispose()
will unref it (and thus release someone else's reference). Fix this by
taking ownership of the property value in the setter.
There's no need for a cast for printing an object's type or address,
so we can remove variables that are unused when not building with
CLUTTER_ENABLE_DEBUG.
Mutter (and libmutter users) are the only users of this version of
cogl, and will more or less only use the cogl-1.0, cogl-2.0 and cogl
experimental API variants, and having the possibility of having
different API versions of the same API depending on what file includes
it is error prone and confusing. Lets just remove the possibility of
having different versions of the same API.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=768977
We bypass our build configuration to fetch API from a version which
isn't the one we actually use. Stop bypassing and just admit that the
1.0 API is still there, but still deprecated.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=768977
We didn't include clutter-build-config.h, meaning we included a
different API of cogl than the rest of clutter. This API contains the
function cogl_sqrti which was the only thing used. Lets include the
build config file and stop depending on the API that is no longer
exposed to us.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=768977
CoglFrameInfo is a frame info container associated with a single
onscreen framebuffer. The clutter stage will eventually support drawing
a stage frame with multiple onscreen framebuffers, thus needs its own
frame info container.
This patch introduces a new stage signal 'presented' and a accompaning
ClutterFrameInfo and adapts the stage windows and past onscreen frame
callbacks users to use the signal and new info container.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=768976
Add support for drawing a stage using multiple framebuffers each making
up one part of the stage. This works by the stage backend
(ClutterStageWindow) providing a list of views which will be for
splitting up the stage in different regions.
A view layout, for now, is a set of rectangles. The stage window (i.e.
stage "backend" will use this information when drawing a frame, using
one framebuffer for each view. The scene graph is adapted to explictly
take a view when painting the stage. It will use this view, its
assigned framebuffer and layout to offset and clip the drawing
accordingly.
This effectively removes any notion of "stage framebuffer", since each
stage now may consist of multiple framebuffers. Therefore, API
involving this has been deprecated and made no-ops; namely
clutter_stage_ensure_context(). Callers are now assumed to either
always use a framebuffer reference explicitly, or push/pop the
framebuffer of a given view where the code has not yet changed to use
the explicit-buffer-using cogl API.
Currently only the nested X11 backend supports this mode fully, and the
per view framebuffers are all offscreen. Upon frame completion, it'll
blit each view's framebuffer onto the onscreen framebuffer before
swapping.
Other backends (X11 CM and native/KMS) are adapted to manage a
full-stage view. The X11 CM backend will continue to use this method,
while the native/KMS backend will be adopted to use multiple view
drawing.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=768976
Instead of assuming there is a single onscreen framebuffer, use the
helper functions for setting the frame callback and getting the frame
counter.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=768976
In preperation for having allowing drawing onto multiple onscreen
framebuffers, move the onscreen framebuffer handling to the
corresponding winsys dependent backends.
Currently the onscreen framebuffer is still accessed, but, as can seen
by the usage of "legacy" in the accessor name, it should be considered
the legacy method. Eventually only the X11 Compositing Manager backend
will make use of the legacy single onscreen framebuffer API.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=768976
Split the stage window implementations into three separate objects: one
for X11 as a compositing manager, one for X11 running as a nested
Wayland compositor, and one for running with the native backend.
The new stage window implementations are only thin shells; this is in
preparation for making the stage windows behave more differently.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=768976
Instead of passing around the KMS file descriptor via clutter to cogl,
just make our own clutter backend create the cogl renderer and set the
KSM fd.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=768976
The actor-offscreen-redirect didn't initialize its state properly, so
it could potentially end up with the "was_painted" state being TRUE
from the start, effectively skipping the whole test.
Fixing so that the test even run resulted in the test getting stuck in
a dead lock due to the verification that a frame was drawn was done
from a paint callback. A paint callback had the mutex held, so when the
test case tried to run the main loop, the next paint callback caller
path taken would try to re-lock the same mutex, thus dead lock.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=768976
In cogl use cogl-config.h and in clutter use clutter-build-config.h. We
can't use clutter-config.h in clutter because its already used and
installed.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=768976
Introduce two new clutter backends: MetaClutterBackendX11 and
MetaClutterBackendNative. They are so far only wrap ClutterBackendX11
and ClutterBackendEglNative respectively, but the aim is to move things
from the original clutter backends when needed.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=768976
Since the check for backend->cogl_context was accidentally moved
to clutter_backend_do_real_create_context, the Glib source that
is created at the end of clutter_backend_do_create_context() is
created and added each time create_context() is called, though
create_context() is supposed to be idempotent.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=768243
The 'select-all' action is currently only bound to <ctrl>a, which makes
it awkward to use when caps-lock is active, and is inconsistent with GTK+.
Just accept both upper- and lower-case variants.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=766326
The device name is something more natural, similar to what's seen
in X11, the sysname is rather the event node basename, which may
also vary depending on device insertion/detection time.
Clutter out of tree depends on Cogl's required dependencies via the
pkg-config file. Since Clutter and Cogl moved in tree, it means that
those dependencies need to be checked by Clutter itself, otherwise
headers and libraries won't be found.
ClutterActor should warn if a user tries to add or remove an actor to,
and from, itself on the scene graph.
Clutter will likely crash, or warn way down the line, but if we can make
debugging simpler then we should.
For the GDK backend We're using the GdkDeviceManager API, which maps to
Clutter's own device manager API. GDK has now moved to a per-seat device
management model, and deprecated the device manager singleton one.
In order to avoid the deprecation warnings, we'd have to implement a
model similar to the GDK one inside the generic Clutter API, but that
would also require moving all the others backend to it, which is pretty
pointless.
Instead, we can disable deprecation warnings for the
ClutterDeviceManager implementation inside the GDK backend.
This updates config.h.win32.in to be in-sync with the entries that are in
the config.h.in that is generated by the autotools builds. In particular,
for Visual Studio builds, we default to enable all available drivers ("*").
The function should return true not only if the actor is being painted
by a ClutterClone, but also if it's inside a sub-graph being painted by
a ClutterClone.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=756371
The constrain callback cannot rely on the pointer position of the
corresponding ClutterInputDevice to get the actual delta of the motion
event that is to be constrained since it is only updated when an event is
dispatched. So change the API to pass the previous pointer position when
constraining.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=752752
Compositors need more detailed information about motion events. Make it
possible to retrieve this information when running the evdev backend by
adding the information to the backend specific event struct.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=752752
Since commit 6183eb3632 we disabled swap
throttling in favour of being driven by the GDK frame clock (and thus by
the compositor).
Compositors may decide to unredirect full screen windows to avoid the
performance penalty of the additional copy, especially on X11, which
means that a Clutter application marked as full screen is not going to
be driven by the compositor, and it's not going to be throttled by the
underlying GL machinery. This has a performance impact on constrained
platforms.
For this reason, we should re-enable swap throttling when the window is
full screen.
As the change was introduced especially because of Wayland, we should
check that we're not running as clients under a Wayland compositor; if
we do, we always keep swap throttling disabled, as the compositor will
always manage our output, even when full screen.
Those can be used to implement different scrolling behaviors.
The fields have been added to ClutterScrollEvent itself. According
to pahole, this makes the struct as big as ClutterButtonEvent and
ClutterTouchEvent, so already at the limit of the ClutterEvent
union.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=757026
We should allow a configuration file to set up the initial state of the
global state, which also implies being able to set the backend.
If the allowed backends have already been set programmatically via the
clutter_set_windowing_backend(), though, then the application code takes
precedence, as we assume that the application author knows better than
us what their code supports or requires.
The configuration file should set up the global state before we
initialize it; instead of relying on implicit ordering, explicitly read
the configuration file once, when creating the global shared context
data structure.
Like CLUTTER_DRIVER, we want to allow users to specify a list of
backends to test, and fall back to the internally defined priority as a
default.
This requires changing the way the allowed backend string is parsed,
both for the CLUTTER_BACKEND environment variable and for the
clutter_set_windowing_backend() function. Existing callers are still
supported with the exact same semantics.
Using environment variables only is not convenient for all platforms,
and in some cases it's beneficial to decide the default driver when
building Clutter. Cogl already has a similar configuration switch, and
since Clutter is overriding the default Cogl behaviour, it should offer
the same mechanism.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=742678
We have an hardcoded list of drivers we have to go through when creating
a Cogl context. Some platforms may expose those drivers, but not be the
preferred ones.
In order to allow users and system integrators to override the list of
drivers, we should crib the same approach used by GDK, and have an
environment variable with a list of drivers to try.
The new environment variable is called `CLUTTER_DRIVER` and accepts a
comma-separated list of driver names, which will be tested in sequence
until one succeeds. There's also an additional '*' token which is used
to ask Clutter to fall back to the internally defined preferred list of
drivers.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=742678
Being able to select text and being able to edit text are two separate
capabilities, but ClutterText only allows the former with the latter.
The ClutterText:selectable property is set to TRUE by default, given
that it depends on the :editable property; this implies that all
ClutterText instances now are going to show a cursor as soon as they get
key focused. Obviously, this would make labels look a bit off — but if
you have a label then you would not give it key focus, either by
explicitly calling clutter_actor_grab_focus(), or by setting it as
reactive and allowing it to be clicked.
If this turns out to be a problem, we have various ways to avoid showing
a cursor — for instance, we could change the default value of the
selectable property, and ensure that setting the :editable property to
TRUE would also set the :selectable property as a side effect. Or we
could hide the cursor until the first button/touch press event. Finally,
we could always back this commit out if it proves to be too much of a
breakage for existing code bases.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=757470
The X11 part of the GDK backend takes into account the scaling factor of its
window when resizing the underlying X11 objects. We need to do the same for
Wayland.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=755245
This is now stored as platform data in the ClutterEvent, so can
be retrieved with the clutter_evdev_event_get_event_code() call
that's been added to the evdev backend.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=758238
Device managers can now implement the ClutterEventExtender interface
that allows them to set their own data to events, make the backend call
those implementations if the device manager implements the interface.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=758238
This normally belonged to the ClutterBackend, however there's device
managers (eg. evdev) that are somewhat detached from the backend, so
need to bridge this somehow.
This allows device managers to implement these bits that were usually
responsibility of the ClutterBackend.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=758238
On X11 those were skipped, so additional pointer buttons would come up
as button >= 8 events. Do here the same, so we remain compatible across
backends.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=758237
There's handlers around relying on up/down/left/right scroll events,
which won't work as expected if only smooth scroll events are sent.
In order to work properly there, we have to retrofit discrete scroll
events on the evdev backend.
Fix this by implementing emission (on devices with a wheel) and
emulation (on anything else) of discrete scroll events. On the former
both smooth and discrete events are set, for the latter we do accumulate
the dx/dy of the latest scroll events, and emit discrete ones when we
accumulated enough. The ending 0/0 event will reset the accumulators for
the next scrolling batch.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=756284
When enable_paint_unmapped is disabled, we shouldn't force the
source widget to be unmapped if the constraints would keep it
mapped; in practice this shouldn't matter unless a paint handler
is messing with the map state.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=745517
Enable animation updates from the GdkFrameClock whenever any timeline is
added to the ClutterMasterClockGdk. This may improve animation
smoothness (depending on the GDK backend in use) because it allows GDK
to tweak its frame timing for animation purposes.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=755357
This is how GdkFrameClock is meant to be used: the frame time is meant
to be queried from the GdkFrameClock within its frame signals, rather
from the system monotonic time source.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=755357
When removing the frame callback on the CoglOnscreen, we loose the ability
to get notified of swap events. This could leave us with a counter != 0
which leads to a deadlock situation after the next realize/draw cycle.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=755014
If we call _clutter_stage_do_update() on a ClutterStage that isn't
mapped/visible, no GL command will be queued, and the Mesa/DRI2
implementation of SwapBuffers will do nothing. This causes
GLX_INTEL_swap_event to not be emitted by the X server because no swapping
has been requested through DRI2 and it eventually leads to a deadlock
situation in ClutterStageCogl because we're waiting for an event before we
start the next draw cycle.
This patch removes the non mapped stages from the list of stages to process.
This is consistent with a previous patch for the ClutterMasterClockGdk [1].
[1] : 5733ad58e5https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=755014
Setting up the sync_to_vblank in the MasterClock is a bit too late as
the MasterClock can be created after a StageWindow has been created
and realized (and therefore all of its Cogl/GL state setup already).
So move the setup to the backend, prior to any StageWindow creation.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=754938
Clutter still uses part of the deprecated stateful API of Cogl (in
particulart cogl_set_framebuffer). It means Cogl can keep an internal
reference to the onscreen object we rendered to. In the case of
foreign window, we want to avoid this, as we don't know what's going
to happen to that window.
This change sets the current Cogl framebuffer to a dummy 1x1
framebuffer if the current Cogl framebuffer is the one we're
unrealizing.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=754890
We're currently hooked to the "update" signal of the FrameClock. When
embedding Clutter inside GTK+ we want to have the layout phase of GTK+
to notify us the size of our stage.
This patch change to FrameClock signal we're listening to, to the
"paint" signal to make sure we've received the layout information from
GTK+, before painting. Otherwise we paint with a delay of one frame.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=754889
The commit 6cd24faaa5 (actor: Clean up
transform_stage_point()) changed the validation of the transformation
matrix to ignore the fraction part of the determinant. This caused
clutter_actor_transform_stage_point() to fail and return FALSE for
actors which scale was less than 1.
Previously the validation was ('det' being a float):
det = (RQ[0][0] * ST[0][0])
+ (RQ[0][1] * ST[0][1])
+ (RQ[0][2] * ST[0][2]);
if (!det)
return FALSE;
Semantically, the if statement expression '!det' is equivalent to
'det == 0', i.e. 'det == 0.0f'. Post cleanup patches, 'det' was turned
into a double, and the if statement was changed to:
if (CLUTTER_NEARBYINT (det) == 0)
return FALSE;
which, different from before, rounds the determinant to the nearest
integer value, meaning determinant in the range (-0.5, 0.5) would be
considered invalid.
This patch reverts this part to the old behavior, while, because of the
inexact nature of floating point arithmetics, allowing a bit more liberal
meaning of "equals to 0" than '== 0.0'.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=754766
When running on wayland, we might have our own subsurface
desynchronized from the foreign GdkWindow. It is important that we
report the size of the actually surface we're rendering to, otherwise
the logic in ClutterStage might discard resize operation that
resynchronize the subsurface with the stage's size.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=754697
For foreign windows this should be dealt with by the embedding
framework. In particular on Wayland with foreign windows, we might
want to create a subsurface and use the foreign window only for events
and frame clock synchronization.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=754697
Some operations like :
* resize
* show/hide
* set_title
* set_user_resizable
should be handled by the embedding framework, so disable them for
foreign windows.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=754671
When using Clutter embed inside a Gtk application, a stage might end
up realized but not visible. In this case we might discard doing any
kind of animation processing.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=754671
Just like GtkGrid, changing the orientation of a ClutterGridLayout does
not change the existing layout; the orientation property is only used as
a hint when adding new children.
We automatically switch the request mode of the container depending on
the GridLayout's orientation, but we need to keep track of the request
mode during allocation, so that we don't get out of sync if the user
changed the request mode after adding the layout manager.
This change also brings us closer to the code in GtkGrid.
We use the orientation of the grid to get the preferred size of the
layout, but we should be using the orientation of the request instead.
The preferred width has an orizontal orientation, and the preferred
height has a vertical orientation.
This allows us to refactor the get_preferred_* implementation into a
separate function.
We are currently using deprecated/Clutter-specific API in Cogl to
retrieve the XVisualInfo associated with the (E)GLX context. Cogl 1.21.2
added new CoglRenderer API to achieve the same result.
We want to use the Cogl GL3 driver, if possible, and then go through a
known list of Cogl drivers, before giving up and using COGL_DRIVER_ANY.
Based on original patch from Emmanuele Bassi.
We have to create and tear down the whole context when trying
out the drivers though because the extension checks do not happen
until cogl_context_init.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=742678
The ClutterX11XInputEventTypes enumeration has been unused inside
Clutter for the past 4 years and a half, since we switched to the
XInput 2 API.
The enumeration itself has always been private, and nobody should
have used it in the first place, but if something breaks, we can
revert this commit.
They should be part of the backend-specific API.
The only backend that has an enumeration type is the X11 one, and it's
small, so we can simply put it there.
This is not an ABI change: the backend-specific symbols are still in
the same SO. You'll be required to import clutter-x11.h to have access
to the GType method at the source level, whereas before just importing
clutter.h would have sufficed. The only user of that enumeration was a
function declared in clutter-x11.h, anyway.
We're inconsistently using the NAMESPACE variable instead of passing
the --identifier-prefix and --symbol-prefix command line arguments to
the introspection scanner.
Now that we can warn about deprecated macros, we should finally do it
for the old, non-namespaced key symbol macros that we've been stringing
along since the 1.0 days.
We want to be able to deprecate macros, but right now the best we can do
is to wrap them with things like:
#ifndef CLUTTER_DISABLE_DEPRECATED
# define A_MACRO_I_WANT_TO_DEPRECATE ...
#endif
Which requires adding a new symbol to the build, and will cause a build
error instead of a compiler/pre-processor warning.
Fortunately, we can use the _Pragma() keyword introduced by C99 and
supported by GCC to add a warning to the output, while leaving the macro
itself intact.
GCC does not have a "deprecated" pragma, so we have to use a generic
warning; this also means we cannot do nifty things like concatenating
strings and the like, as we do for the "deprecated" attribute.
The macro deprecation symbol should have the same affordances as the
function deprecation one, and evaluate to nothing if the required
version is lower than the current version; or if the global toggle for
deprecation warnings is in effect.