If a test is not expected to succeed, then running it could be considered
to be a waste of resources, particularly if the failure might manifest
as an indefinite hang (see cogl!11), or if the test is likely to dump core
and trigger "expensive" crash-reporting mechanisms like systemd-coredump,
corekeeper, abrt or apport.
Skip the tests that are expected to fail. They can still be requested via
an environment variable, which can be set after fixing a bug to check which
tests are now passing.
Originally cogl!15, adapted for mutter's fork of cogl to use gboolean
instead of CoglBool.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1272
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@debian.org>
When r is 128 or more, running tests compiled with the undefined behaviour
sanitizer (ubsan) reports:
test-utils.c:312:45: runtime error: left shift of 128 by 24 places cannot be represented in type 'int'
which indeed it cannot. Force the type to be unsigned 32-bit so that we
get defined behaviour.
Similarly, in test-atlas-migration, the left-shifted guint8 is promoted
to int, which again does not have enough non-sign bits available to
left-shift a value >= 128 by 24 bits. Again, force the shift to be done
in unsigned 32-bit space.
This was originally cogl!22, but applies equally to mutter's fork of cogl.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1271
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@debian.org>
According to the cogl_bitmap_new_for_data documentation, the data is not
copied, so the application must keep the buffer alive for the lifetime
of the CoglBitmap. Freeing it too early led to a use-after-free in the
cogl unit tests. With that fixed, the test passes, so remove the known
failure annotation.
This AddressSanitizer trace is from the original cogl, but the bug and
fix apply equally to mutter's fork of cogl:
==6223==ERROR: AddressSanitizer: heap-use-after-free on address 0x62100001a500 at pc 0x7f3e2d4e7f4e bp 0x7ffcd9c41f30 sp 0x7ffcd9c416e0
READ of size 4096 at 0x62100001a500 thread T0
#0 0x7f3e2d4e7f4d (/usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libasan.so.5+0x96f4d)
#1 0x7f3e260c7f6b in util_copy_box ../src/gallium/auxiliary/util/u_surface.c:131
#2 0x7f3e268c6c10 in u_default_texture_subdata ../src/gallium/auxiliary/util/u_transfer.c:67
#3 0x7f3e26486459 in st_TexSubImage ../src/mesa/state_tracker/st_cb_texture.c:1480
#4 0x7f3e26487029 in st_TexImage ../src/mesa/state_tracker/st_cb_texture.c:1709
#5 0x7f3e26487029 in st_TexImage ../src/mesa/state_tracker/st_cb_texture.c:1691
#6 0x7f3e2644bdba in teximage ../src/mesa/main/teximage.c:3105
#7 0x7f3e2644bdba in teximage_err ../src/mesa/main/teximage.c:3132
#8 0x7f3e2644d84f in _mesa_TexImage2D ../src/mesa/main/teximage.c:3170
#9 0x7f3e2cd1f7df in _cogl_texture_driver_upload_to_gl driver/gl/gl/cogl-texture-driver-gl.c:347
#10 0x7f3e2ccd441b in allocate_from_bitmap driver/gl/cogl-texture-2d-gl.c:255
#11 0x7f3e2ccd441b in _cogl_texture_2d_gl_allocate driver/gl/cogl-texture-2d-gl.c:462
#12 0x7f3e2ce3a6c0 in cogl_texture_allocate cogl/cogl-texture.c:1398
#13 0x7f3e2ce3e116 in _cogl_texture_pre_paint cogl/cogl-texture.c:359
#14 0x7f3e2cdee177 in _cogl_pipeline_layer_pre_paint cogl/cogl-pipeline-layer.c:864
#15 0x7f3e2cd574af in _cogl_rectangles_validate_layer_cb cogl/cogl-primitives.c:542
#16 0x7f3e2cdd742f in cogl_pipeline_foreach_layer cogl/cogl-pipeline.c:735
#17 0x7f3e2cd5c8b0 in _cogl_framebuffer_draw_multitextured_rectangles cogl/cogl-primitives.c:658
#18 0x7f3e2cd60152 in cogl_rectangle cogl/cogl-primitives.c:858
#19 0x5570a71ed6a0 in check_texture tests/conform/test-premult.c:103
#20 0x5570a71ed946 in test_premult tests/conform/test-premult.c:159
#21 0x5570a71df0d6 in main tests/conform/test-conform-main.c:58
#22 0x7f3e2bcd809a in __libc_start_main ../csu/libc-start.c:308
#23 0x5570a71e0869 in _start (/home/smcv/src/debian/cogl/tests/conform/.libs/test-conformance+0x33869)
0x62100001a500 is located 0 bytes inside of 4096-byte region [0x62100001a500,0x62100001b500)
freed by thread T0 here:
#0 0x7f3e2d5581d7 in __interceptor_free (/usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libasan.so.5+0x1071d7)
#1 0x5570a71ed58b in make_texture tests/conform/test-premult.c:69
previously allocated by thread T0 here:
#0 0x7f3e2d558588 in malloc (/usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libasan.so.5+0x107588)
#1 0x7f3e2d384500 in g_malloc ../../../glib/gmem.c:99
This was originally cogl!12.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1274
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@debian.org>
Change the warp modes test to sanity check CoglPrimitive based polygon
drawing instead of cogl_polygon(). This removes some checks, as
cogl_polygon() has explicitly documented special behaviour for automatic
wrap modes, which CoglPrimitive does not.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/935
When painting, actors rely on semi global state tracked by the state to
get various things needed for painting, such as the current draw
framebuffer. Having state hidden in such ways can be very deceiving as
it's hard to follow changes spread out, and adding more and more state
that should be tracked during a paint gets annoying as they will not
change in isolation but one by one in their own places. To do this
better, introduce a paint context that is passed along in paint calls
that contains the necessary state needed during painting.
The paint context implements a framebuffer stack just as Cogl works,
which is currently needed for offscreen rendering used by clutter.
The same context is passed around for paint nodes, contents and effects
as well.
In this commit, the context is only introduced, but not used. It aims to
replace the Cogl framebuffer stack, and will allow actors to know what
view it is currently painted on.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/935
This is inspired by 98892391d7 where the usage of
`g_signal_handler_disconnect()` without resetting the corresponding
handler id later resulted in a bug. Using `g_clear_signal_handler()`
makes sure we avoid similar bugs and is almost always the better
alternative. We use it for new code, let's clean up the old code to
also use it.
A further benefit is that it can get called even if the passed id is
0, allowing us to remove a lot of now unnessecary checks, and the fact
that `g_clear_signal_handler()` checks for the right type size, forcing us
to clean up all places where we used `guint` instead of `gulong`.
No functional changes intended here and all changes should be trivial,
thus bundled in one big commit.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/940
The function create_texture() in test-wrap-modes.c takes a
TestUtilsTextureFlags. However a CoglTextureFlags is passed instead
in two calls. As the enums are identical this patch changes it to
use the TestUtils type.
The enum definitions:
typedef enum
{
COGL_TEXTURE_NONE = 0,
COGL_TEXTURE_NO_AUTO_MIPMAP = 1 << 0,
COGL_TEXTURE_NO_SLICING = 1 << 1,
COGL_TEXTURE_NO_ATLAS = 1 << 2
} CoglTextureFlags;
typedef enum
{
TEST_UTILS_TEXTURE_NONE = 0,
TEST_UTILS_TEXTURE_NO_AUTO_MIPMAP = 1 << 0,
TEST_UTILS_TEXTURE_NO_SLICING = 1 << 1,
TEST_UTILS_TEXTURE_NO_ATLAS = 1 << 2
} TestUtilsTextureFlags;
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/938
As the first step into removing Cogl types that are covered by
Graphene, remove CoglEuler and replace it by graphene_euler_t.
This is a mostly straightforward replacement, except that the
naming conventions changed a bit. Cogl uses "heading" for the
Y axis, "pitch" for the X axis, and "roll" for the Z axis, and
graphene uses the axis themselves. That means the 1st and 2nd
arguments need to be swapped.
Also adapt the matrix stack to store a graphene_euler_t in the
rotation node -- that simplifies the code a bit as well.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/458
This is for all intents and purposes the same as
`cogl_object_ref/unref`, but still refers to handles rather than
objects (while we're trying to get rid of the former) so it's a bit of
unnecessary redundant API.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/451
This was introduced in:
commit 010d16f647
Author: Robert Bragg <robert@linux.intel.com>
Date: Tue Mar 6 03:21:30 2012 +0000
Adds initial GLES2 integration support
This makes it possible to integrate existing GLES2 code with
applications using Cogl as the rendering api.
That's maybe a reasonable thing for a standalone cogl to want, but our
cogl has only one consumer. So if we want additional rendering out of
our cogl layer, it makes more sense to just add that to cogl rather than
support clutter or mutter or the javascript bindings creating their own
GLES contexts.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/500
Cogl unit tests are just functions inside normal code files that needs to be
dload'ed by the test binary.
So in case unit-tests are enabled, we need to export those symbols.
Since map file can't be overridden, use a configure_file to generate the map
file when tests are enabled, in order to export the needed symbols.
Then goes through the source files to look unit tests checking for their macro
definition and load them with the runner script.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/442
Use find-conform-unit-tests.sh to create a meson list of tests to run.
This allows to run each test as single test with meson and to remove the timeout
for all the tests.
Instead of changing 'run-tests.sh' to take test-names as arguments we can just
generate simple dummy test-files for each test, without having to change the
tooling.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/442
This basically reverts commit 54735dec, which tried to avoid the
GLib-defined types in favor the standard C ones. One exception to this
is the bool type, for which the commit introduces a new type CoglBool.
Let's just get rid of this type in favor of having consistency with the
GLib types. Note by the way that neither CoglBool nor gboolean (which
has a size of `int`) are completely compatible with bool (size `char`).
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/321
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
In plenty of places a non-static function was defined but didn't have
the corresponding declaration. Fix this by adding them, or alternatively
making them static.
I saw Meson fade from the sky
On the wind I heard a sigh
As snowflakes cover fallen Makefiles
I will say this last goodbye
Meson is now coming
So ends Autotools days
Future is now coming
And we must away
Over Python and without Bashisms
Through lands where never Meson touched
By silver streams that run down to the Sea
Under parsers, beneath old legacy
Over snow one winter’s morn
I turned at last to paths that lead home
And though where the road then takes me
I cannot tell
We came all this way
But now comes the day
To bid you farewell
Many places I have been
Many sorrows I have seen
But I don’t regret
Nor will I forget
All Makefiles that took that road with me
I bid you all a very fond farewell.
This is the last remaining feature necessary to achieve
parity with the Autotools build.
A few changes were made to the install locations of the
tests, in order to better acomodate them in Meson:
* Tests are now installed under a versioned folder (e.g.
/usr/share/installed-tests/mutter-4)
* The mutter-cogl.test file is now generated from an .in
file, instead of a series of $(echo)s from within Makefile.
Notice that those tests need very controlled environments
to run correctly. Mutter installed tests, for example, will
failed when running under a regular session due to D-Bus
failing to acquire the ScreenCast and/or RemoteScreen names.
This commit includes following fixes for a few shell scripts:
1. Follow the best practice of quoting variables everywhere unless they
are used in places where word-splitting and globbing can never happen.
2. Replace `command` with $(command) because the latter is easier to use
and read.
3. Don't use "$@" in places expecting a string because it is an array
of strings instead of a single string.
Bash is not always installed in /bin and we should not hardcode the path
of it in source code which is expected to be built on many operating
systems and distributions.
Since most scripts using #!/bin/bash here doesn't have any bashism,
they can be converted to #!/bin/sh instead of using /usr/bin/env trick.
Meson uses the 'dependencies' field to determine and
parallelize build steps, but that isn't entirely true
with 'link_with'; this might cause a race condition
when generating header files while trying to build
them.
Fix that by only using 'dependencies' instead of 'link_with'.
This commit adds meson build support to mutter. It takes a step away
from the three separate code bases with three different autotools setups
into a single meson build system. There are still places that can be
unified better, for example by removing various "config.h" style files
from cogl and clutter, centralizing debug C flags and other configurable
macros, and similar artifacts that are there only because they were once
separate code bases.
There are some differences between the autotools setup and the new
meson. Here are a few:
The meson setup doesn't generate wrapper scripts for various cogl and
clutter test cases. What these tests did was more or less generate a
tiny script that called an executable with a test name as the argument.
To run particular tests, just run the test executable with the name of
the test as the argument.
The meson setup doesn't install test files anymore. The autotools test
suite was designed towards working with installed tests, but it didn't
really still, and now with meson, it doesn't install anything at all,
but instead makes sure that everything runs with the uninstalled input
files, binaries and libraries when running the test suite. Installable
tests may come later.
Tests from cogl, clutter and mutter are run on 'meson test'. In
autotools, only cogl and clutter tests were run on 'make check'.
There are different unit-tests file generated containing lists of tests
the test-runner.sh should run. Running run-tests.sh read the unit-tests
in the current directory, which is inconvenient to do when using meson.