Some of the tests were ignoring the return value of
clutter_init_with_args and instead they would recognise an error by
seeing whether the GError parameter was set. This patch changes it to
check the return value so that it won't give a warning now that
G_GNUC_WARN_UNUSED_RESULT is on that function.
http://bugzilla.clutter-project.org/show_bug.cgi?id=2574
Many people expect clutter_init to work the same way as gtk_init which
exits the program on init failure. clutter_init however returns a
status code on failure which applications need to handle because if
the init fails then any further Clutter calls are likely to crash. In
Clutter 2.0 we may want to change this to be more like GTK+.
http://bugzilla.clutter-project.org/show_bug.cgi?id=2574
Make sure users get the idea that clutter_init()
has a return value that needs to be checked.
These were fixed via sed magic:
sed -i -s -e "s/clutter_init (.*)/\
if (& != CLUTTER_INIT_SUCCESS)\n return 1/"\
doc/*/*/*.{c,xml} doc/*/*.xml
http://bugzilla.clutter-project.org/show_bug.cgi?id=2574
This fixes segfaults when something goes wrong during
init, but the test keeps going anyway.
Except for test-easing and test-picking, these were fixed by
sed magic:
sed -i -s -e "s/clutter_init \?(&argc, &argv)/\
if (clutter_init (\&argc, \&argv) != CLUTTER_INIT_SUCCESS)\n\
return 1/" tests/*/*.c
http://bugzilla.clutter-project.org/show_bug.cgi?id=2574
This adds a conformance test which creates a lot of textures with
increasing size and destroys them again a number of times in order to
cause a few atlas migrations. The last time the textures are created
they are all read back and the data is verified to confirm that the
atlas migration successfully preserved the data.
When using a pipeline and the journal to blit images between
framebuffers, it should disable blending. Otherwise it will end up
blending the source texture with uninitialised garbage in the
destination texture.
The maintainer-clean files list is horribly out of date, nobody is
maintaining it, and it's honestly easier to use `git clean -xdf`
instead to clean untracked files.
Converting from Pango units to pixels by using the C conventions might
cause us to lose a pixel; since we're doing the same for the height, we
should use ceilf() to round up the width and the line height.
http://bugzilla.clutter-project.org/show_bug.cgi?id=2573
Add an effects chapter which gives a broad overview of
the abstract classes in the effects API, plus a short
example of how to apply one of the stock Clutter
effects (ClutterColorizeEffect).
The recipe explains how to create a custom ClutterDeformEffect
to produce a page fold (code based on ClutterPageTurnEffect).
The example code includes the effect class plus a small
application to apply it to a texture.
The ClutterDeformEffect sub-classes are effectively deforming the
texture target of an FBO, not the actor itself. Thus, we need to
use the FBO's size, and not the actor's allocated size, given that
the actor might be transformed prior to applying an effect.
http://bugzilla.clutter-project.org/show_bug.cgi?id=2571
Since the FBO target might have a different size than the mere paint box
of the actor, we need API to get it out of the ClutterOffscreenEffect
private data structure and on to sub-classes.
Since we cannot add new API in a stable cycle, we need a private
function; we'll leave it there even when opening 1.7, since it's useful
for internal purposes.
Once upon a time, the land of Clutter had a stage singleton. It was
created automatically at initialization time and stayed around even
after the main loop was terminated. The singleton was content in
being all there was. There also was a global API to handle the
configuration of the stage singleton that would affect the behaviour
on other classes, signals and properties.
Then, an evil wizard came along and locked the stage singleton in his
black tower, and twisted it until it was possible to create new stages.
These new stages were pesky, and didn't have the same semantics of the
singleton: they didn't stay around when closed, or terminate the main
loop on delete events.
The evil wizard also started moving all the stage-related API from the
global context into class-specific methods.
Finally, the evil wizard cast a spell, and the stage singleton was
demoted to creation on demand - and until somebody called the
clutter_stage_get_default() function, the singleton remained in a limbo
of NULL pointers and undefined memory areas.
There was a last bit - literally - of information still held by the
global API; a tiny, little flag that disabled per-actor motion events.
The evil wizard added private accessors for it, and stored it inside the
stage private structure, in preparation for a deprecation that would
come in a future development cycle.
The evil wizard looked down upon the land of Clutter from the height of
his black tower; the lay of the land had been reshaped into a crucible
of potential, and the last dregs of the original force of creation were
either molted into new, useful shapes, or blasted away by the sheer fury
of his will.
All was good.
The clutter-id-pool.h header is private and not installed; yet, all the
clutter_id_pool_* symbols are public. Let's correct this oversight we've
been stringing along since forever.
Only allow access to the ClutterMainContext through the private
_clutter_context_get_default() function, so we can easily grep
it and remove the unwanted usage of the global context.
The shader stack held by ClutterMainContext should only be accessed
using functions, and not directly.
Since it's a stack, we can use stack-like operations: push, pop and
peek.
The _clutter_do_redraw() function should really be moved inside
ClutterStage, since all it does is calling private stage and
backend functions. This also allows us to change a long-standing
issue with a global fps counter for all stages, instead of a\
per-stage one.
Let's try and start reducing the size of ClutterActorPrivate by moving
some optional, out-of-band data from it to GObject data.
The ShaderData structure is a prime candidate for this migration: it
does not need to be inspected by the actor, and its relationship with an
actor is transient and optional.
By attaching it to the actor's instance through g_object_set_data() we
neatly tie its lifetime to the instance, and we don't have to care
cleaning it up in the finalize()/dispose() implementation of
ClutterActor itself.
If an atlas texture's last reference is held by the journal or by the
last flushed pipeline then if an atlas migration is started it can
cause a crash. This is because the atlas migration will cause a
journal flush and can sometimes change the current pipeline which
means that the texture would be destroyed during migration.
This patch adds an extra 'post_reorganize' callback to the existing
'reorganize' callback (which is now renamed to 'pre_reorganize'). The
pre_reorganize callback is now called before the atlas grabs a list of
the current textures instead of after so that it doesn't matter if the
journal flush destroys some of those textures. The pre_reorganize
callback for CoglAtlasTexture grabs a reference to all of the textures
so that they can not be destroyed when the migration changes the
pipeline. In the post_reorganize callback the reference is removed
again.
http://bugzilla.clutter-project.org/show_bug.cgi?id=2538
In _clutter_actor_queue_redraw_with_clip it has a local variable to
mark when a new paint volume for the clip is created so that it can be
freed when the function returns. However the actual code to free the
paint volume went missing in 3b789490d2 so the variable did
nothing. This patch just adds the free back in.