XFixesShowCursor / XFixesHideCursor does not actually take the suppled
window argument into account -- the effect is actually global. Use
XDefineCursor instead.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=707071
Destroying an actor is supposed to destroy all of its children, so
it makes sense to reason that destroying the stage should destroy all
of its children, too.
Unfortunately, it seems that the stage removed all of its children
without destroying them before chaining up to what would destroy all
of its children, for whatever reason. Change this to a destroy so
resources get cleaned up.
The TextureNode premultiplies the blend color passed to the node
constructor, so we need to document the fact properly to avoid
causing premultiplication twice.
We can also allow passing NULL for a color, and use a fully opaque
white, to make the code slightly more friendly.
ClutterTextureNode will do that for us when converting the ClutterColor
to a CoglColor, so we can simply pass a white color with the correct
alpha channel.
The calculation (n - 1) * spacing to compute the total spacing is
only correct for n >= 1 - if there are no visible rows/cols, the
required spacing is 0 rather than negative.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=709434
For some XI2 we do not have a Stage associated to the event window.
Original patch by: Giovanni Campagna <scampa.giovanni@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Emmanuele Bassi <ebassi@gnome.org>
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=708439
On high DPI density displays we create surfaces with a size scaled up by
a certain factor. Even if the contents stay at the same relative size
and position, we need to compensate the scaling both when changing the
surface size, and when dealing with input.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=705915
In order to transparently support high DPI density displays, we must
maintain all coordinates and sizes exactly as they are now — but draw
them on a surface that is scaled up by a certain factor. In order to
do that we have to change the viewport and initial transformation
matrix so that they are scaled up by the same factor.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=705915
The added support is very very basic (single touch, motion only,
no acceleration, no pressure recognition), but anything more
complex requires a state machine that will be hopefully provided
by libinputcommon in the future.
And at least, with this patch the pointer moves, which will be
useful for people testing wayland in 3.10 without a physical mouse.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=706494
In situations when the default backend would fail (for example
when compiled with X11 support but run without DISPLAY), or
when the application is using backend specific code, it makes
sense to let the application choose the backend explicitly.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=707869
It was a bad idea to add it, because clutter events are batched,
so by the time the application processes one, the keyboard state
internally tracked by clutter could be already different.
Instead, apps should use clutter_event_get_state_full()
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=706494
We can't dispatch a motion event for EV_REL (because we don't
have yet the other half of the event), but we can't also queue
them at the end of processing (because we may lose some history
or have button/keys intermixed).
Instead, we use EV_SYN, which means "one logical event was
completed", and let the winsys-independent code do the actual
motion compression.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=706494
When we release a device, we lose all the events after that point,
so our state can become stale. Similarly, we need to sync the
state with the effectively pressed keys when we reclaim.
This ensures that modifier keys don't get stuck when switching
VTs using a keybinding.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=706494
When talking to other applications or serializing the modifier
state (and in particular when implementing a wayland compositor),
the effective modifier state alone is not sufficient, one needs
to know the base, latched and locked modifiers.
Previously one could do with backend specific functionality
such as clutter_device_manager_evdev_get_xkb_state(), but the
problem is that the internal data structures are updated as
soon as the events are fetched from the upstream source, but
the events are reported to the application some time later,
and thus the two can get out of sync.
This way, on the other hand, the information is cached in the
event, and provided to the application with the value that
was current when the event was generated.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=706494
These two devices are logically tied togheter, and their state
should always be the same. Also, we need to update them after
the event is queued, as the current modifier state (as opposed to the
modifier mask in the event) should include also the effect of the last
key press/release.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=706494
Add a new callback that is called prior to emitting pointer
motion events and that can modify the new pointer position.
The main purpose is allowing multiscreen apps to prevent the
pointer for entering the dead area that exists when the screens
are not the same size, but it could also used to implement
pointer barriers.
A callback is needed to make sure that the hook is called early
enough and the Clutter state is always consistent.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=706652
If we don't get passed a CoglFramebuffer when creating the root paint
node then we ask Cogl to give us the current draw buffer.
This allows the text-cache conformance test to pass, but it'll require
further investigation.
Currently the default values according to their param spec don't
match the actually used defaults, so update the former to reflect
the actual behavior.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=703809
Whether a child should receive extra space should be determined
by the expand property, not [xy]_fill (which just determine how
additional space should be used). The behavior is already correct
when using the ClutterActor:[xy]_expand properties, but needs
fixing for the corresponding ClutterBoxLayoutChild property.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=703809
Just as BoxLayout, BinLayout uses an odd interpretation of the box
passed into allocate(): to define a child area of (w x h) starting at
(x, y), callers need to pass a box of (x, 2 * x + w, y, 2 * y + h).
This behavior is just confusing, change it to use the full box for
child allocations.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=703809
Currently, BoxLayout interprets the box passed into allocate() in
a fairly peculiar way:
- in the direction of the box, all space between [xy]1 and [xy]2
is distributed among children (e.g. children occupy the entire
width/height of the box, offset by [xy]1)
- in the opposite direction, expanded children receive space
between [xy]1 and the height/width of the box (e.g. children
occupy the width/height of the box minus [xy]1, offset by [xy]1)
The second behavior doesn't make much sense, so adjust it to interpret
the box parameter in the same way as the first one.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=703809
The implicitly created transitions are removed when complete by the
implicit transition machinery. The remove-on-complete hint is for
user-provided transitions.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=705739
ClutterTransition:remove-on-complete uses the ClutterTimeline::stopped
signal, as it's the signal that tells us that the timeline's duration
has fully elapsed.
Mouse wheel events come as EV_REL/REL_WHEEL, and we can convert
them to clutter events on the assumption that scrolling with
the wheel is always vertical.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=705710
xkb_state_update_key() needs to be called only on state transitions,
otherwise the state tracking gets confused and locks certain modifiers
forever.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=705710
A wayland compositor needs to have more keyboard state than
ClutterModifierState exposes, so it makes sense for it to use
xkb_state directly. Also, it makes sense for it to provide
it's own keymap, to ensure a consistent view between the compositor
and the wayland clients.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=705710
All evdev devices are slave devices, which means that xkb state
and pointer position must be shared by emulating a core keyboard
and a core pointer. Also, we must make sure to add all modifier
state (keyboard and button) to our events.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=705710
Hardware keycodes in Clutter events are x11 keycodes, which are
the same as evdev + 8, but we need to reverse the translation when
explicitly asked for an evdev keycode.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=705710
In some cases, applications (or actually, wayland compositors)
don't have the required permissions to access evdev directly, but
can do so with an external helper like weston-launch.
Allow them to do so with a custom callback that replaces the regular
open() path.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=704269
This is necessary to avoid a deadlock with the compositor. When setting
a stage size before the stage was shown this would trigger a redraw
inside clutter_stage_wayland_resize. This redraw would result
in a call into eglSwapBuffers which would attach a buffer to the surface
and commit. Unfortunately this would happen before the role for the
surface was set. This would result in the compositor not relaying to the
client that the desired frame was shown.
With this change the call to wl_shell_surface_set_toplevel is always
made before the first redraw.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=704457
We should not create a shell surface and set the role for that shell
surface if the surface was a foreign one provided through
clutter_wayland_set_wl_surface
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=699578
This adds support for optionally a providing a foreign Wayland surface
to a ClutterStage before it is first show. Setting a foreign surface
prevents Cogl from allocating a surface and shell surface for the stage
automatically.
v2: add CLUTTER_AVAILABLE_IN_1_16 annotation and API reference docs
(review from Emmanuele Bassi)
v3: set a boolean to indicate that this stage is using a foreign surface
(Rob Bradford)
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=699578
This allows the integration of Clutter with another library, like GTK+,
that is dispatching the events itself. This is implemented by calling
into the cogl_wayland_renderer_set_event_dispatch_enabled() and since
that function must be called on the newly created renderer the newly
added clutter_wayland_disable_event_retrieval must be called before
clutter_init()
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=704279
Since commit 4543ed6ac3 in Cogl, Cogl will now try to consume
Windows message itself. This doesn't really cause any problems because
both message loops just call DispatchMessage which will cause the
message to be routed through Clutter's window procedure either way.
However, it's not great to have two sources listening for messages so
this patch disables Cogl's message retrieval.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=701356
This removes a bit of work that we have to do for every device, and makes it
easy for mutter to patch out parts of the event mask it doesn't want.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=703969
The Wayland 1.0 API allows orthoganal components of an application to
query the shell and compositor themselves by querying their own
wl_registry. The corresponding API in Cogl has been removed so Clutter
shouldn't call it anymore.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=703878
The Wayland server API has changed so that wl_shm_buffer is no longer
a type of wl_buffer and wl_buffer will become an opaque type. This
changes ClutterWaylandSurface to accept resources for a wl_buffer
instead of directly taking the wl_buffer so that it can do different
things depending on whether the resource points to an SHM buffer or a
normal buffer. This matches similar changes to Cogl:
https://git.gnome.org/browse/cogl/commit/?id=9b35e1651ad0e46ed48989https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=703608
Cogl 1.16 has deprecated a lot of API which it will be difficult for
Clutter to catch up with. For the time being the warnings are just
being disabled to keep the build output clean.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=703877
There is no reasonable use case for having the functions, the virtual
functions, and the signals for realization and unrealization; the
concept belongs to an older era, when we though it would have been
possible to migrate actors across different GL contexts, of in case a GL
context would not have been available until the main loop started
spinning. That is most definitely not possible today, and too much code
would utterly break if we ever supported that.
The majority of Clutter input events require a time so that that the
upper levels of abstraction can identify the ordering of events and also
work out a click count.
Although some Wayland events have microsecond timestamps not all those
that Clutter expects do have. Therefore we would need to create some
fake times for those events. Instead we always calculate our own time
using the monotonic time.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=697285
If we allow content repeats on the texture nodes, then we need to use
the "automatic" wrap mode for the texture layer in the pipeline, instead
of the clamp-to-edge one.
Reported-by: Matthew Watson <matthew@endlessm.com>
Signed-off-by: Emmanuele Bassi <ebassi@gnome.org>
This reverts commit 6dd9da05c7.
Windowing system features we need are not mapped on cogl_has_feature().
Signed-off-by: Emmanuele Bassi <ebassi@gnome.org>
Cogl (as of 0b2b46ce) now only sets the shell surface as toplevel when
the CoglOnscreen is shown.
Without calling wl_shell_surface_set_toplevel the compositor will not
know what role to give to the compositor and thus the stage will not
appear.
When we look to support multiple roles / foreign surfaces we will need
to revisit this call and ensure we only call it when we are working in
the default case.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=703188
Since Cogl also polls on this file descriptor we can get into situations
where our event source is woken up to handle events but those events
have instead been handled by Cogl resulting in the source sitting in
poll().
We can safely rely on Cogl to handle the polling on the event source and
to dispatch those events.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=702202
When the cursor visibility changes, we have to relayout the ClutterText
actor instead of just redrawing it - as the cursor changes the
PangoLayout size, a size request cycle is needed.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=702610
While we still don't want to perform implicit transitions on unmapped
actors, we can relax the requirement on having been painted once; the
was_painted flag was introduced to avoid performing implicit transitions
on the :allocation property, but for that we can use the
needs_allocation flag instead, as needs_allocation will be set to FALSE
when we have been painted as well.
Thus, we retain our original goal of not having actors "flying" into
position on their first allocation, without the side effect of
preventing animations when emitting the ::show signal.
When setting the font using clutter_text_set_font_description(), the
font settings on a ClutterText actor can be reset when there is a dpi
changes signaled by the backend.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=702016
1ddef9576d87c98fafbcefe3108f04866630c2cd had its logic the
wrong way round, a gesture should begin as soon as the requested number
of touchpoints is reached. Correcting this fixes tap events
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=700980
When we changed the MetaGroup to handle internal effects, we updated
has_effects(), but forgot to fix the equivalent has_constrains() and
has_actions() method.
Now, if we clear the constraints or the actions on an actor, and we
call has_constraints() or has_actions(), we get an false positive.
When using a ClutterOffscreenEffect, the size of the offscreen buffer
allocated to perform the effect is currently computed using the paint
volume of the actor it's attached to and in the case the paint volume
cannot be computed, the effect falls back to using the stage's size.
If you scale an actor enough so its paint volume is much bigger that
the size of the stage, you can end up running out of memory (which
leads to your application crashing).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=699675
The "should this implicit transition be skipped" check should live into
its own function, where we can actually explain what it does and which
conditions should be respected.
Instead of just blindly skipping actors that are unmapped, or haven't
been painted yet, we should add a couple of escape hatches.
First of all, we don't want :allocation to be implicitly animated until
we have been painted (thus allocated) once; this avoids actors "flying
in" into their allocation.
We also want to allow implicit transitions on the opacity even if we
haven't been painted yet; the internal optimization that we employ in
clutter_actor_paint() and skips painting fully transparent actors is
exactly that: an internal optimization. Caller code should not be aware
of this change, and it should not influence code outside of ClutterActor
itself.
The rest of the conditions are the same: if the easing state's duration
is zero, or if the actor is both unmapped and not in a cloned branch of
the scene graph, then implicit transitions are pointless, as they won't
be painted.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=698766
This should actually ensure that the calculations of the Z translation
for the projection matrix is resolved to "variable * CONSTANT". The
original factors are left in code so it's trivial to revert to the
trigonometric operations if need be, even without reverting this commit.
The ClutterActor::paint signal is deprecated, and connecting to it even
to get notifications will disable clipped redraws because of violations
of the paint volume.
The only actual valid use case for notifications of a successful frame
is on the ClutterStage, so we should add new (experimental) API for it,
so that users can actually subscribe to it — at least if you're writing
a compositor.
Shoving a signal in a performance critical path is not an option, and
I'm not sure I want to commit to an API like this yet. I reserve the
right to revisit this decision in the future.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=698783
Currently, clutter_canvas_set_size() causes invalidation of the canvas
contents only if the newly set size is different. There are cases when
we want to invalidate the content regardless of the size set, but we
cannot do that right now without possibly causing two invalidations,
for instance:
clutter_canvas_set_size (canvas, new_width, new_height);
clutter_content_invalidate (canvas);
will cause two invalidations if the newly set size is different than
the existing one. One way to work around it is to check the current
size of the canvas and either call set_size() or invalidate() depending
on whether the size differs or not, respectively:
g_object_get (canvas, "width", &width, "height", &height, NULL);
if (width != new_width || height != new_height)
clutter_canvas_set_size (canvas, new_width, new_height);
else
clutter_content_invalidate (canvas);
this, howevere, implies knowledge of the internals of ClutterCanvas,
and of its optimizations — and encodes a certain behaviour in third
party code, which makes changes further down the line harder.
We could remove the optimization, and just issue an invalidation
regardless of the surface size, but it's not something I'd be happy to
do. Instead, we can add a new function specifically for ClutterCanvas
that causes a forced invalidation regardless of the size change. If we
ever decide to remove the optimization further down the road, we can
simply deprecate the function, and make it an alias of invalidate()
or set_size().
Since we are trying to eliminate the ClutterGeometry type, we should
replace the only entry point still using it: the ::cursor-event signal
of ClutterText.
Instead of passing the cursor geometry, we should add an accessor
function.
The combination of signal and getter for the cursor geometry means that
we can deprecate ClutterText::cursor-event, and mark it for removal in
Clutter 2.0.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=682789
On the other backends we will get some sort of expose event after
showing the stage's window which will queue a redraw. These expose
events don't exist on Wayland so nothing will cause Clutter to queue a
redraw. Weston doesn't bother displaying anything for the stage's
surface until the first buffer is sent, which of course it will never
receive if Clutter doesn't paint anything. This patch just makes it
explicitly queue a redraw after the stage is shown so that we will
always pass at least one frame to the compositor.
The bug can be seen by running test-stage-sizing. That example doesn't
have any animations so it won't try to queue any redraws until
something interacts with it. On the other hand something like
test-actors works fine without the patch because it constantly queues
redraws anyway in order to display the animation.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=696791
If clutter is built with both X11 and Wayland support, prefer the
(more complete for now) X11 backend. This matches GTK+'s current
ordering.
This allows distributions to ship a clutter version with both backends
built, and using an envvar to switch to the wayland backend and test
applications.
In the future, applications would be able to choose which backend
they prefer and in which order.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=695838
If an actor has not been painted yet, or it's not going to be painted,
we can ignore transitions queued on it.
By ignoring transitions on actors that have not been painted yet, we can
avoid doing work during the set up phase of the scene graph, as well as
avoiding actors "flying in" from nowhere.
Obviously, we have to take into account potential clones, so we need to
check that the actor is not part of a cloned branch of the scene graph,
as well as checking if the actor has mapped clones.
If an actor is unmapped then it won't be painted, so we can safely
short-circuit out of _clutter_actor_queue_redraw_full() if the mapped
flag is not set.
We need, on the other hand, make an exception for Clones, otherwise
they won't receive notification that the source actor has changed
and they won't be painted.
This allows us to ignore redraws queued on children of invisible
parents, and avoid traversing the scene graph.
Instead of using signal notifications, we should be able to keep track
of the clones of an actor from within ClutterActor itself, using private
API. There's no point in pretending that people can actually create a
Clone class out of tree, given the amount of invariants we have to punch
through in order to implement a proper replicator node of the scene
graph, so we can just skip the signal emissions and just do the right
thing at the right time.
More comments are warranted: these functions are pretty much full of
potential side effects, and I'd really like to avoid keeping everything
in my head forever.
Along with the comments and the type casting reduction, I sneaked in a
one line change that is clearly correct after reading the flow of the
whole thing: we queue only a relayout after three potential redraws have
been queued. If we manage to miss a redraw and yet still get a relayout
then it means that most of our assumptions are fundamentally wrong, and
that we ought to dump this whole business of computer programming, and
just go back to being a hunter-gatherer species.
Since XIQueryVersion, the bad API that it is, chooses the first client
version that it gets, we need to ensure that we pass XIQueryVersion the
new XI2.3 version, knowing fully well that Clutter won't be confused
by the new features.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=692466
The X server should fill in the minor version that it supports in the
case where it only supports the older version. We should not get a
BadRequest or fail the version check if we pass something higher.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=692466
Text exposed by the AtkText methods should be the text
displayed to the user (like the internal method
clutter_text_get_display_text). So it should use the password-char
if it is being used.
This is also a security concern.
The original code inside ClutterActor that dealt with Transitions
stopping was written for the ::completed signal, thus the code was
correctly handling the lifetime of the instances; when we moved to the
::stopped signal, we assumed that it worked in the same way - with less
conditions to be checked, obviously, but fundamentally similar to the
::completed signal. Sadly, I screwed up the signal definition, and the
signal ended up calling our handlers, but not the default one that did
the cleanup and released references on the Animatable instance.
After fixing the Timeline::stopped signal, we can go back to the
previous code.
Thanks to Craig Hughes for the help in tracking down this mess.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=695158
A copy and paste thinko: the ::stopped signal is using the
ClutterTimelineClass.completed slot instead of the .stopped one,
thus preventing sub-classes of ClutterTimeline from overriding the
signal's default closure.
When stopping the transition we need to release the reference we
maintain while removing the Transition from the hash table inside an
actor. If we fail to do so, the Transition is never released, which
means we leak the Animatable instance we tied to it.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=695158
The ClutterOffscreenEffect.get_target_size() method has been deprecated,
and replaced by the get_target_rect() one. We can easily switch to the
latter, and avoid the deprecation warning.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=670004
The target size is not always enough, there are cases where the offset
used to paint the target must also be available for developers
implementing an OffscreenEffect.
The get_target_rect() method returns the rectangle used to paint the
target, with the offsets in the ClutterRect:origin and the texture size
in the ClutterRect:size fields, respectively.
The get_target_size() method should be deprecated, given that its
replacement is generally more useful.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=670004
If we pass TRUE for x_align and FALSE for y_align, the full available
width should be passed to clutter_get_preferred_height, and the same
should be true in the other dimension.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=694237
Instead of directly accessing the instance fields. This removes a
compiler warning after the constification of g_get_prgname(), and it
seems to me to be generally more correct.
Instead of using a custom apply_transform(), paint(), and pick()
implementations, we can simply apply a transformation to the children of
a ScrollActor.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=686225
As wayland-client.h and wayland-server.h can't be included together,
split the Wayland backend file into clutter-backend-wayland.h, which
only defines the types, and clutter-backend-wayland-priv.h, which
actually uses the Wayland client types.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Stone <daniel@fooishbar.org>
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=692851
The definition of wl_display differs between Wayland clients and
servers, and it's unsafe to include both wayland-client.h and
wayland-server.h at the same time. Fudge around this by making the
compositor public API use void * rather than struct wl_display *.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Stone <daniel@fooishbar.org>
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=692851
This function is deprecated and has been replaced by set_display() on
the renderer. This is done in the get_renderer() vfunc of both the x11
and gdk backends already.
Actually cogl_xlib_set_diplay() is now a no-op and can be safely removed.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=687652
Being able to set a marker at a normalized point on a timeline, instead
of using a specific time, is a nice fit with the current Timeline class
API.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=694319
If anything in the system changes the config for fontconfig then an
XSetting will be set to record the last timestamp of the config file.
This is presumably so that applications can be notified that it has
changed and can reload the configuration. However once this setting is
set it will remain set for the lifetime of the X server. This causes
Clutter to handle the setting during the initialisation of the
backend. Previously this would cause problems because Clutter would
end up creating the default PangoFontMap before the backend has
created the CoglContext. The PangoFontMap would in turn cause the
default CoglContext to be created. Clutter will then later create its
own CoglContext which means there will be two and the first one will
be leaked. Cogl currently can't really cope with multiple contexts
being created so it falls apart.
This patch fixes it to skip reloading the config for fontconfig if
there isn't a default font map yet. The config will presumably
naturally be read with the latest values when it is finally created
anyway so it doesn't need to be read immediately.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=693696
New experimental API is added to allow changing the way that redraws
are timed for a stage to include a "sync delay" - a period after
the vertical blanking period where Clutter simply waits for updates.
In detail, the algorithm is that when the master clock is restarted
after drawing a frame (in the case where there are timelines running)
or started fresh in response to a queued redraw or relayout, the
start is scheduled at the next sync point (sync_delay ms after the
predicted vblank period) rather than done immediately.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=692901
In commit 8f4e39b6d7 the Wayland code was updated to use the new
xkbcommon API. This involved changing the common XKB code shared with
the evdev input backend. However the evdev input backend was not
modified so it wouldn't compile. This patch just makes a minor change
to update it.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=693348
Use the buffer_age extension when available to recycle backbuffer contents
instead of blitting from the back to front buffer when doing clipped redraws.
The picking is now done in a pixel that is going to be repaired during the next
redraw cycle for non static scences.
This should improve performance and avoid tearing.
Reviewed-by: Robert Bragg <robert@linux.intel.com>
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=669122
This allows us to report to the backend that the stage's back buffer has been trashed
while handling picking. If the backend is keeping track of the contents of back buffers
so it can minimize how much of the stage is redrawn then it needs to know when we do pick
renders so it can invalidate the back buffer.
Based on patch from Robert Bragg <robert@linux.intel.com>
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=669122
The behaviour imitates GtkEntry and ignores attributes from markup because Pango
barfs on invalid markup. Also add an example to the text-field interactive test.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=686477
As x11 considers num lock and scroll lock to be modifiers, code that
checks for an exact modifier combination will fail if naively done when
num lock or scroll lock are turned on. Applications that want to ignore
these modifiers will need to use XKB to manually mask out the modifier
state.
As it is very unlikely that applications will want to care about the
state of num lock or scroll lock for key press/key release events, mask
out the num lock and scroll lock keys automatically.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=690664
This has been disabled since February 2008, on the grounds that XFixes
didn't work reliably for hiding cursors. This has almost certainly been
fixed then and seems to work entirely reliably across a number of X
servers released in the past few years, and is definitely better than a
1x1 black dot for a cursor.
Helpfully though, where the spec states that the cursor will be hidden
when inside the specified window or one of its children, it actually
only uses the window to look up the Screen, and hides the cursor across
the entire Screen. So, when using this, we also need to track crossing
events.
If it's still broken, this needs to be fixed in the X server.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=690497
Signed-off-by: Daniel Stone <daniel@fooishbar.org>
The _clutter_process_event() function may get called while already
servicing a _clutter_process_event() invocation (eg. when generating
ENTER events before emitting TOUCH_BEGIN).
In these cases clutter_get_current_event() would return NULL after
the inner call to _clutter_process_event() has finished, thereafter
making the current event inaccessible during the remaining portion
of the outer event emission.
By stacking the current events in ClutterMainContext instead of
simply replacing them we do not lose track of the real current event.
Also update clutter_get_current_event_time() to be consistent from a
reentrancy perspective.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=688457
Instead of placing the whole body of the function inside an if block,
let's make it clear what each part of the function does. Also, add more
comments.
GLib 2.36 will deprecate g_type_init() in favour of automatic
initialization through a constructor function. We need to add the
version check to avoid a compiler warning.
When setting an explicit transform with clutter_actor_set_transform()
and a non (0,0) pivot-point, clutter_actor_apply_transform() will fail
to roll back the pivot-point translation done before multiplying the
transformation matrix due to the "out:" label being slightly misplaced
in clutter_actor_real_apply_transform().
This works properly:
clutter_actor_set_pivot_point (actor, 0.5, 0.5);
clutter_actor_set_rotation_angle (actor, CLUTTER_Z_AXIS, 30);
This results in the actor being moved to the pivot-point position:
clutter_actor_set_pivot_point (actor, 0.5, 0.5);
clutter_matrix_init_identity(&matrix);
cogl_matrix_rotate (&matrix, 30, 0, 0, 1.0);
clutter_actor_set_transform (actor, &matrix);
This also add a conformance test checking that even when using a
pivot-point, no matter how a rotation is set the resulting
transformation matrix will be the same.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=690214
clutter_actor_allocate_preferred_size is supposed to use the fixed
position of an actor. Unfortunately, recent refactorings made it so
that it accidentally used the current allocation. As the current
allocation may be adjusted by the actor, or have been previously
allocated in a strange spot, it may have unintended side effects. Use
the fixed positioning of the actor instead.
This fixes weird issues with margins colliding with
ClutterFixedLayout, causing strange offsets on relayout.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=689316
The documentation said that you should return TRUE to mark
that the action was handled, but the code did the reverse.
Change the documentation to reflect what all the other gestures
do.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=689061
Otherwise, we'll have incorrect scrolling when we switch hardware
devices without switching virtual devices. For example, on a ThinkPad,
scroll using the touchpad, move the eraser mouse, and then scroll again:
the deltas will be wrong. This also matches what GTK+ does.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=689258
When trying to clamp to pixel a box that is exactly in between 2
pixels, the clutter_actor_box_clamp_to_pixel() function changes the
size of the box.
Here is an example :
ClutterActorBox box = { 10.5, 10, 20.5, 20};
g_message ("%fx%f -> %fx%f", box.x1, box.y1, box.x2, box.y2);
clutter_actor_box_clamp_to_pixel (&box);
g_message ("%fx%f -> %fx%f", box.x1, box.y1, box.x2, box.y2);
Here is what you get :
** Message: 10.500000x10.000000 -> 20.500000x20.000000
** Message: 10.000000x10.000000 -> 21.000000x20.000000
That is because of the properties of the ceilf and floorf function
used to do the clamping.
For example, ceil(0.5) is 1.0, and ceil(-0.5) is 0.0.
And, floor(0.5) is 0.0, and floor(-0.5) is -1.0.
To work around that problem this patch retains the distance between x
and y coordinates and apply that difference before calling ceilf() on
x2 and y2.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=689073
Export the last event received for each touch point in its entirety,
instead of duplicating ClutterEvent accessors one at a time.
examples/pan-action.c has been updated to show the type of the event
that's causing the panning.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=685737
TapAction is a GestureAction-subclass that handles clicks and
tap gestures. It is meant to provide a replacement for ClickAction
using GestureAction:
• it handles events trasparently without capturing them, so that it
can coexists with other GestureActions;
• the ::tap signal is not emitted if the drag threshold is exceeded;
• building upon GestureAction the amount of code is greatly reduced.
TapAction provides:
• tap signal, notifying users when a tap has been performed.
The image-content example program has been updated replacing its
ClickAction usage with TapAction.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=683948
Ensure that when cancelling a gesture, either because a callback
has returned FALSE or because clutter_gesture_action_cancel() has
been called, the array tracking touch points is emptied and a whole
new set of touch points is needed before restarting the gesture.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=685221
Let gesture subclasses override how the drag threshold should
be handled:
• CLUTTER_GESTURE_TRIGGER_NONE tells GestureAction that the gesture
must begin immediately and there's no drag limit that will cause
its cancellation;
• CLUTTER_GESTURE_TRIGGER_AFTER is the default GestureAction behaviour,
where it needs to wait until the drag threshold has been exceeded
before considering the gesture valid;
• CLUTTER_GESTURE_TRIGGER_BEFORE will make GestureAction cancel
the gesture once the drag exceed the configured threshold.
For example, ZoomAction and RotateAction could set
CLUTTER_GESTURE_TRIGGER_NONE since the use of two fingers makes the
begin of the action more self-evident, while an hypothetical Tap
gesture may use CLUTTER_GESTURE_TRIGGER_BEFORE to cancel the tap if
the pointer moves too much.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=685028
The code for handling key repeats (and in particular stopping on focus loss)
assumes that the repeat key is set to XKB_KEYCODE_INVALID in the default case.
This change switches to the new mechanism for loading a cursor into a buffer.
It no longer relies on having a PNG stored in a known location and instead
loads from the Wayland cursor theme.
Signed-off-by: Rob Bradford <rob@linux.intel.com>
Add support for repeating keys to the Wayland input backend.
Unfortunately the repeat delay/interval is hardcoded into the Clutter
backend, as Wayland doesn't yet tell clients what the global values
should be.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Stone <daniel@fooishbar.org>
For Wayland, this is mostly the input protocol having changed, although
there's also the SHM pool API, the cursor API, as well as fullscreen and
ping.
Also port to the new (months-old) xkbcommon API, as used by Weston 0.95.
This involves having xkbcommon manage the state for us, where
appropriate. Fans of multi-layout keyboards (or just caps lock) will no
doubt appreciate these changes.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Stone <daniel@fooishbar.org>
Looks like we need to include this directly, but also need to include
cogl/cogl.h to get COGL_HAS_EGL_SUPPORT, since cogl-egl.h doesn't
include cogl-defines.h first.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Stone <daniel@fooishbar.org>
If a button press happen on stage and the pointer is moved outside
the stage while holding the mouse button, the motion and release
events are still delivered to actors. Do the same X11 soft grab
emulation for touch events.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=685589
On various systems, trying to release a mutex that hasn't been acquired
will result in a run-time error.
In order to avoid this, we trylock() the Big Clutter Lock™ and
immediately unlock() it, regardless of the result; if the lock was
already acquired, trylock() will immediately fail, and we can release
it; if the lock was not acquired, trylock() will succeed, and we can
release the lock immediately.
This is necessary to maintain binary compatibility and invariants for
Clutter applications doing:
clutter_init()
clutter_threads_enter()
...
clutter_main()
...
clutter_threads_leave()
instead of the correct:
clutter_init()
clutter_threads_enter()
...
clutter_threads_leave()
clutter_main()
clutter_threads_enter()
...
clutter_threads_leave()
With Clutter ≥ 1.12, the idiomatic form is:
clutter_init()
...
clutter_main()
given that the public Big Clutter Lock™ acquire/release API has been
deprecated, and nobody should take the lock outside of Clutter itself.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=679439
When the last touch has been released the stage on the
corresponding master device (eg. the virtual core pointer) is set
to NULL and no mouse events can be delivered until an ENTER event
has occurred and the stage pointer restored.
This is due to the fact that the master devices can send both
touch events and mouse events, forwarding events coming from the
attached slave devices.
To restore delivery of mouse events we need to ensure that the
stage is set on each ButtonPress, ButtonRelease and Motion event
coming from master devices.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=684509
When using the new ActorAlign flags we must get the real alignment for
the horizontal axis, as clutter_actor_allocate() will compute the
effective alignment by itself; if we use the effective alignment then
ClutterActor.allocate() will swap it, and undo our work.
When using the old BinAlignment flags we should reverse the alignment
depending on whether the text direction of the child is RTL or LTR.
See bug: https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=684214
It should be possible to destroy the actor currently being dragged from
within the ::drag-end signal. In order to do this, we need to keep a
reference on the action for the duration of the emit_drag_end() function
as well as resetting the action's state inside the dispose()
implementation, to avoid trying to access cleared data.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=681814
Modified Return key presses don't trigger ::activate so we would end
up adding an unprintable character to a single paragraph mode pango
layout which renders it as a box.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=623344
The code for calculating the content box when the aspect ratio is
greater than 1 was broken. The same code that did the calculation for
aspect ratio less than 1 should be used in all cases.
Fixes: https://bugzilla.gnome.org/682161
When we miss button release events (eg. when they happen outside
of our window) we must ensure that the corresponding point is
removed from the array of tracked points, otherwise GestureAction
will get very confused and will cancel all subsequent gestures.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=683471
When starting a new gesture before the momentum of the previous one
has finished the ::pan-stopped was counter-intuitively emitted
after the new ::gesture-begin.
Make use of gesture_prepare() to reset the state of the action
right before emitting ::gesture-begin.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=683431
We often mean that when key_focus == NULL, it's assumed to be on the
stage, and clutter_stage_get_key_focus() reflects this. We also do a
lot of check around the lines of key_focus == NULL instead of also
checking for the stage, so make sure to normalize it so that explicitly
grabbing the stage's key focus will not change our behaviour.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=683301
The ClutterEventSequence structure is a fully opaque type; on X11, it is
just an unsigned integer that gets converted into a pointer, but in the
future it may become a fully fledged data structure.
Obviously, we cannot tell people to just dereference the pointer into an
integer in order to use it, and still retain the ability to change the
type; for this reason, we need a proper accessor function to convert the
EventSequence into a touch detail, to be used with the XInput API.
The ordering of the evdev button numbers is the opposite of the
order in Clutter (the middle button is 3 instead of 2) so we need to
manually map the button numbers when creating a ClutterButtonEvent.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=680255
803b3bafb6 introduced a new issue for
multi touch events.
In the case where 2 touch events for 2 different touch points are
processed in the same iteration, a call to
_clutter_stage_remove_device() when processing the first event will
remove the stage setting of the InputDevice. That means Clutter will
skip the second event, because it can't find a stage to which relate
the event, so no related actor and so no emission.
To fix this we move the _clutter_stage_(add/remove)_device() calls
into the input device. This way the input device can find out exactly
when to call these functions (i.e. when no touch point were previously
active or when no touch point remain active).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=682362
Interpolating between two transformations expressed using a 3D matrix
can be achieved by decomposing the matrices into their transformations
and do a simple numeric interpolation between the initial and final
states, like we do for other data types.
Luckily for us, the CSS Transforms specification from the W3C provides
the decomposition algorithm, using the "unmatrix" code taken from the
book "Graphics Gems II, edited by Jim Arvo".
Once the matrices have been decomposed, we can simply interpolate the
transformations, and re-apply them onto the result matrix, using the
facilities that Clutter provides for interpolating between two known
GTypes.
Since Cogl version 1.11.2, Cogl no longer includes the EGL headers
from cogl.h if COGL_ENABLE_EXPERIMENTAL_2_0_API is defined. Instead
the application needs to include cogl-egl.h so that we can avoid
polluting the global namespace with X defines. Clutter defines the 2.0
define in its configure.ac and it is relying on Cogl to include the
right EGL header in clutter-egl-headers.h so we need to change which
header it includes.
When changing an implicit transition mid flight we may end up with an
easing state with a duration of zero milliseconds; this leads to the
implicit transition machinery setting the final state directly onto the
actor. If there is a running transition, though, we need to remove it
from the transitions table, otherwise it will keep running.
This regression happened when the update_transition() internal function
was merged into the create_transition() one.
Tested-by: Lionel Landwerlin <llandwerlin@gmail.com>
PanAction is a GestureAction-subclass that implements the panning
concept for scrollable actors, with the ability to emit interpolated
signals to emulate the kinetic inertia of the panning. PanAction provides:
• pan signal, notifying users of the panning gesture status;
• pan-stopped signal, emitted at the end of the interpolated phase
of the panning gesture, if enabled;
• pan-axis property, to allow constraining the dragging to a specific
axis;
• interpolated property, to enable or disable the inertial behaviour;
• deceleration property, to customize the rate at which the momentum
of the panning will be slowed down;
• acceleration-factor property, applied to the inertial momentum when
starting the interpolated sequence.
An interactive test is also provided.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=681648
Add some accessors to simplify common tasks for GestureAction users:
• clutter_gesture_action_get_motion_delta() to get the delta
on the X and Y axis in stage coordinates since the last motion
event, and the scalar distance travelled;
• clutter_gesture_action_get_velocity() to get an estimate of the
speed of the last motion event along the X and Y axis and as a
scalar value in pixels per millisecond.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=681648
When appending (with a negative row/column parameter), the row/column
count should be incremented by 1, not 2. This also fixes layout errors
when using column/row spacing: The amount of extra space required was
calculated incorrectly due to the wrong column count.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=679990
When setting a drag handle, transform the original press
coordinates using the drag handle as reference instead of the
associated actor.
This causes the initial misplacement of drag handle in
example/drag-action when holding down the Shift key: the handle
gets placed at the main actor origin on the first drag event,
instead of following the mouse pointer.
All subsequent motion events already use the right actor when
transforming the coordinates, thus they are not affected.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=681746
If the DragAction has a drag handle that gets destroyed inside the
::drag-end signal handler, the destruction sequence will trigger a
callback we have in place to check if the handle is being destroyed
mid-drag, e.g. from a ::drag-motion event.
The callback on the drag handle destruction will check if we are still
in the middle of a drag and emit the ::drag-end signal to allow cleaning
up; the callback erroneously uses the drag handle as the argument for
the emit_drag_end() function — instead of the actor to which the drag
action has been attached. Also, by the time we emit the ::drag-end, we
are not dragging the actor any more, so we shouldn't be emitted the
::drag-end signal twice.
The fix is, thus, made of two parts:
- reset the in_drag boolean before emitting the ::drag-end signal
so that destroying the drag handle will not result in a double
signal emission;
- use the correct actor when calling emit_drag_end().
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=681814
If the actor has a fixed position set, but it's not using the BinLayout
alignment enumeration to set its alignment, then we force the alignment
factor to 0.0; this is consistent with what happens with an explicit
alignment of CLUTTER_BIN_ALIGNMENT_FIXED.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=682265
Event handling should only apply to editable ClutterText actors, but we
also have the :selectable property to care about.
The button/touch press should position the cursor inside an editable
ClutterText; the :selectable property should be used to allow selecting
the text, either through pointer or touch dragging, via the keyboard, or
by multiple pointer clicks. If neither of these two conditions are met,
the ClutterText should just propagate the event handling further.
Allow setting a ClutterRect on the drag action and force the
dragged actor's position to be always within that rectangle (relative
to the actor's parent).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=681168
The boolean_handled accumulator will stop the signal emission if TRUE is
returned by a signal handler; the boolean_continue accumulator will stop
the signal emission if FALSE is returned. The first one is used for
event-related signals, while the latter is used for action-related
signals.
Only the signal connection. When using G_ENABLE_DIAGNOSTIC there will be
a warning for every signal connection.
We should try and discourage people from ever using the paint signal
ever again, until we can safely remove it in Clutter 2.0.
We cannot fully deprecate Geometry, because ClutterActor and ClutterText
are actually using the type in signals and properties; but we can
deprecate the API that uses this type, so that 2.0 will be able to avoid
it entirely.
The :clip property still uses ClutterGeometry, which is a very bad
rectangle type. Since we cannot change the type of the property
compatibly, we should introduce a new property using ClutterRect
instead. This also matches the ClutterActor.set_clip() API, which uses a
decomposed rectangle with floating point values, like we do with
set_position() and set_size().
Instead of only relying on the (now) deprecated BinAlignment.FIXED
enumeration value, we just ask the actor if a fixed position has been
explicitly set, under the assumption that if a developer decided to call
set_x(), set_y(), or set_position() on an actor inside a BinLayout then
she wanted the fixed position to be honoured.
This removes the last (proper) use of the BinAlignment enumeration.
The Geometry type is an *awful* representation of a integer rectangle,
as it uses unsigned integers for its size, leading to overflow issues
when unioning and intersecting. We have better rectangle types in
Cairo and Clutter, these days.
When dragging/scrolling using touch events, we want the same behaviour
than for motion events. We need to honor the user's calls to
clutter_stage_set_motion_events_enabled() to deactive event
bubbling/captured sequences on the actor located under the pointer and
just transmit events to the stage/grab actor.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=680751
We need to make sure that ClutterActor::transition-stopped is emitted
after the transition was removed from the actor's list of transitions.
We cannot just remove the TransitionClosure from the hash table that
holds the transitions associated to an actor, and let the
TransitionClosure free function stop the timeline, thus emitting the
::transition-stopped signal - otherwise, stopping the timeline will end
up trying to remove the transition from the hash table, and we'll get
either a warning or a segfault.
Since we know we're removing the timeline anyway, we can emit the signal
ourselves in case the timeline is playing, in both the implicit and
explicit cases.
The :transform property controls the modelview matrix of an actor; it
can be used to set a custom modelview matrix on the actor, as opposed
to the decomposed transformations (rotation, scaling, translation)
provided by the ClutterActor class.
The transitions we create implicitly should be removed from the set of
transitions associated to an actor; the transitions explicitly
associated to an actor, though, have to survive the emission of their
'stopped' signal.
We can remove the update_transition() private method, and move its
functionality inside the create_transition() private method, thereby
removing lots of duplicated code, as well as redundant checks on the
existence of a transition. This will allow handling transition updates
atomically in the future.
Another progress function from the CSS3 Transitions specification, using
a parametrices cubic bezier curve between (0, 0) and (1, 1) with two
control points.
(sadly, no ASCII art can approximate a cubic bezier, so no graph)
The cubic-bezier() progress function comes with a bunch of preset easing
modes: ease, ease-in, ease-out, and ease-in-out, that we can map to
enumeration values.
The CSS3 Transitions specification from the W3C defines the possibility
of using a parametrized step() timing function, with the following
prototype:
steps(n_steps, [ start | end ])
where @n_steps represents the number of steps used to divide an interval
between 0 and 1; the 'start' and 'end' tokens describe whether the value
change should happen at the start of the transition, or at the end.
For instance, the "steps(3, start)" timing function has the following
profile:
1 | x
| |
| x---|
| ' |
| x---' |
| ' |
0 |---' |
Whereas the "steps(3, end)" timing function has the following profile:
1 | x---|
| ' |
| x---' |
| ' |
x---' |
| |
0 | |
Since ClutterTimeline uses an enumeration for controlling the progress
mode, we need additional API to define the parameters of the steps()
progress; for this reason, we need a CLUTTER_STEPS enumeration value,
and a method for setting the number of steps and the value transition
policy.
The CSS3 Transitions spec helpfully also defines a step-start and a
step-end shorthands, which expand to step(1, start) and step(1, end)
respectively; we can provide a CLUTTER_STEP_START and CLUTTER_STEP_END
enumeration values for those.
This patch brings 'enter-event' and 'leave-event' generation for touch
based devices. This leads to adding a new API to retrieve coordinates
of a touch point.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=679797
We use floorf() for the allocation origin, and ceilf() for the
allocation size. Swapping the two introduces rounding errors if
the original allocation is not clamped to the nearest pixel.
This reverts commit 7f6b17bc50.
ClutterLayoutManager implementations should just defer the easing state
set up to the child, and not try to impose a global one.
This reverts commit 793bde9143.
ClutterLayoutManager implementations should just defer the easing state
set up to the child, and not try to impose a global one.
This reverts commit 320fb156b4.
ClutterLayoutManager implementations should just defer the easing state
set up to the child, and not try to impose a global one.
This reverts commit 58a1854b57.
ClutterLayoutManager implementations should just defer the easing state
set up to the child, and not try to impose a global one.
This reverts commit 03ec016faa.
ClutterLayoutManager implementations should just defer the easing state
set up to the child, and not try to impose a global one.
ClutterTexture is full of side effects that have been picked up over the
years; they make improving ClutterTexture harder than necessary, as well
as making subclassing impossible without introducing weird behaviours in
the child classes as well.
Since Clutter 1.10 we have the ClutterImage content type, which is
side-effects free, given that it just paints texture data using the
state of the actor.
Sadly, we still have subclasses of ClutterTexture, both deprecated and
not, so we cannot deprecate ClutterTexture right out; the type and
structures will still be available, like we do for ClutterGroup, but the
whole API should be moved to the deprecated section, waiting for the
time in which we can get rid of it all.
We need an alternative to the translation performed by the anchor point,
one that possibly applies to all three axes and is relative to the
pivot-point.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=677853
For some transformations we need to be able to set the Z component of
the pivot point.
Unlike :pivot-point, the Z coordinate is not normalized because actors
are 2D surfaces.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=677853
Given that the rotation transformations are now affected by the pivot
point, the Actor class should provide an accessors pair only for the
angle of rotation on a given axis.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=677853
The pivot point is a point in normalized coordinates space around which
all transformations revolve.
It supercedes the anchor point and the per-transformation center points
as well as the gravity settings, and tries to sort out the mess that
is the modelview matrix set up in ClutterActor.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=677853
The ClutterActor:depth property has always been a bit of a misnomer:
actors are 2D flat surfaces, so they cannot have "depth"; the property
defines the position on the Z axis.
Another side effect of the :depth property is that it decides the
default paint and allocation order on insertion, and that setting it
will call the ClutterContainer.sort_depth_order() method. This has
proven to be a fairly bad design decision that we strung along from the
0.x days, as it gives a false impression of being able to change the
paint and allocation order simply by changing the position on the Z
axis — something that, in reality, requires depth testing to be enabled
during the paint sequence of an actor's parent.
For 2.0 we need a clean break from the side effects, and a better
defined interface.
ClutterActor:z-position is essentially what ClutterActor:depth is, but
doesn't call into ClutterContainer, and has a more apt name.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=679465
The :position property on ClutterText clashes with the same property on
ClutterActor; it's also badly named, given that it represents the
cursor's position inside the text; finally, it does not match its
accessors, violating the API style conventions.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=679457
Overriding the default behaviour of ClutterDragAction::drag-motion is
currently a pain; you either need to subclass the ClutterDragAction and
override the class closure for the signal, or you need to connect to the
signal and call g_signal_stop_emission_by_name() - neither option being
particularly nice or clean. The established pattern for these cases
would be to have a boolean return value on the ::drag-motion signal, but
we cannot do that without breaking ABI.
To solve the issue in a backward compatible way, we should introduce a
new signal, ::drag-progress, with a boolean return value. If the signal
emission chain returns TRUE, the ::drag-motion signal will be emitted,
and the default behaviour will be honoured; if the signal emission chain
returns FALSE, instead, the ::drag-motion signal will not be emitted.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=679451
Acquiring the Clutter lock to mark critical sections is not portable,
and not recommended to implement threaded applications with Clutter.
The recommended pattern is to use worker threads, and schedule UI
updates inside idle or timeout handlers within the main loop. We should
enforce this pattern by deprecating the threads_enter()/leave()
functions. For compatibility concerns, we need internal API to acquire
the main lock during frame processing dispatch.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=679450
It can be useful to check whether a ClutterActorIter is currently valid,
i.e. if the iterator has been initialized *and* if the actor to which it
refers to hasn't been updated.
We can also use the is_valid() method in the conformance test suite to
check that initialization has been successful, and that changing the
children list through the ClutterActorIter API leaves the iterator in a
valid state.
The dispose sequence will keep the object alive, and we need to release
the last reference held by the StageManager before releasing control to
GObject.
The build should not add deprecated/ into the default INCLUDE paths, so
that deprecated headers are clearly separated; this will make it easier
to get rid of them when we branch out for 2.0.
Copy and paste of the implementation done at Gtk+ based on pango. This
should be moved to a common library, like the old GailTextUtil. Ideally
on pango itself.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=677221
It is possible that we get a DeviceChanged event for a device
that is not in the hash table yet. E.g. I've seen this when
using xrandr to change screen resolution. Prevent a crash in
this case.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/review?bug=678439
* clutter/clutter-cairo-texture.c (clutter_cairo_texture_emit_draw):
Always update the Cogl texture after emitting ::draw, since we control
the dynamic extent in which drawing should happen on the cairo_t.
Fixes#677966.
If the Interval used has a different type than the property we are
animating through a PropertyTransition then we should transform the
interpolated value before applying it, to avoid warnings down the
line.
The compute() method will cache the result, to avoid multiple
allocations and copies; this means, though, that we need to unset the
GValue when destroying the Interval.
Now that the interval can transform the initial and final values to the
type declared when constructing it, there is no need to check for the
value type inside set_initial_value() and set_final_value().
It's possible that GValues passed to a ClutterInterval setter are not
of the same type as the interval - for instance, if they come from
language bindings, or from untrusted sources; we can use the same
transformation functions we already use inside ClutterTransition to
ensure that the ClutterInterval always stores values of the same type
used to create the interval itself.
The ::stopped signal should be emitted at the end of the Timeline, after
the last ::completed signal emission, in order to have a proper
chronological progress of signal emissions:
started → new-frame → [ ... ] → completed → stopped
This way, ::stopped can perform a proper teardown of the state set up
during ::started, without interfering with the potential cyclical
emission of ::completed.
Calling clutter_point_free(clutter_point_zero()) or calling
clutter_rect_free(clutter_rect_zero()) should be safe, exactly like it's
safe to call those functions with a NULL argument.
The implicit animations only apply to properties that are documented as
'animatable'; the explicit animations apply to any property defined
through GObject or ClutterAnimatable.
For 1.x, we still have a duration of 0 msecs, but we have a valid easing
state, so we can change the easing parameters without calling save and
restore.
By checking if the interval is valid inside compute_value() we can catch
the cases where the interval values of a PropertyTransition are set
after the transition has been added to an Animatable instance - i.e. the
following code:
let transition = new Clutter.PropertyTransition();
transition.set_property_name('opacity');
actor.add_transition('opacityAnim', transition);
transition.set_to_value(0);
should be equivalent to:
let transition = new Clutter.PropertyTransition();
transition.set_property_name('opacity');
transition.set_to_value(0);
actor.add_transition('opacityAnim', transition);
instead of emitting a warning.
Once a ClutterPropertyTransition is attached to a ClutterAnimatable, if
no interval is set we can simply use the current state of the property
to define the from and to values. This allows the creation of property
transitions from the current state of the Animatable instance without
excessive verbosity.
ClutterContent implementations may allow repeating their contents when
painting; we should provide the repeat policy on the actor, like we do
for scaling filters and content gravity.
ClutterActor's x-align and y-align properties should be used to control
the alignment of the PangoLayout when painting it within a larger
allocation, and the ClutterText has the x-expand or the y-expand flags
set.
Fixed positions are defined to be initialized at 0,0 whenever
enabled, by setting fixed_position_enabled to true, or by setting
just one of x/y. This normally happens in the defaults, but we need
to make sure it also happens if a fixed position was once set but
then disabled. We do this by always resetting it back to 0,0 when
fixed_position_set is unset.
Instead of showing the full timestamp for debugging messages that happen
within a second, showing the delta from the previous full timestamp can
be more useful when debugging; this allows immediately seeing the time
difference, instead of doing the math in our heads.
Only for debug builds, the debug name should include a) actor name, b)
type name, and c) pointer address.
For non-debug builds we can live with the actor/type name.
ClutterGridLayout is port of GtkGrid to a Clutter layout manager. All
the logic is taken from gtkgrid.c, so all the credits should go to
Matthias Clasen for writing this nice piece of code.
ClutterGridLayout supports adding children with it's own methods
GridLayout.attach() and GridLayout.attach_next_to() as well as
Actor.add_child() and friends. The latter adds children in a similar
fashion to ClutterBoxLayout
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=677372
The plain C bytes array, while convenient from a C perspective, is not
well handled by language bindings: the length of the array is not
specified, and it's only just implied by the image data size, rowstride,
and pixel format.
GBytes is a read-only bytes buffer that has an implicit length; we can
use it as the storage medium so that language bindings can actually
function correctly.
This will ensure that we have a CoglContext, albeit the stub winsys one,
on Mac.
Tested-by: Roland Peffer <gdevel@clixxun.com>
Tested-by: Laszlo Pandy <laszlok2@gmail.com>
The ::stopped signal is emitted when the timeline has been completely
exhausted or when the timeline has been programmatically stopped by
using clutter_timeline_stop(); the notification at the end of the
timeline run allows to write handlers without having to check whether
the current repeat is the last one, like we are forced to do when using
the ::completed signal.
Based on the patch by: Jasper St. Pierre <jstpierre@mecheye.net>
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=676854
Ensure that resizing transitions smoothly when switching between major
axis; the allocation aspect ratio is not important: it's the size of the
allocation that dictates the major axis.
It's similar to to the implicit animation API of ClutterActor and
compatible to deprecated API of ClutterBoxLayout and
ClutterTableLayout.
It adds :use-animations, :easing-mode, :easing-duration and
:easing-delay properties to control animations when allocation of a
child has changed. Layout manager implementers should call
use_animations = clutter_layout_manager_get_easing_state (manager,
&mode,
&duration,
&delay);
from the allocate() virtual function to access these values.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=676827
The z coordinate of the origin should be checked against the same
coordinate of the vertex behind it. Given that most actors are flat
surfaces, this check should always succeed.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=675396
Instead of going through clutter_event_get_state() and checking if the
modifier mask is set, we can provide simple convenience functions to do
it for us.
When creating a FlowLayout container, setting a specific size on it, and
adding a child to it, as per the attached testcase, it crashes. The line
on the backtrace doesn't really make sense, but from looking over it, it
appears that it's probably because priv->line_natural is NULL. The
attached patch makes it so in this case, priv->line_natural is
allocated.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=676068
Signed-off-by: Emmanuele Bassi <ebassi@linux.intel.com>
-Don't include unistd.h and stdint.h unconditionally as not all Windows
compilers have them around.
-Only include cogl/cogl-xlib.h when it is really supported by Cogl and GDK.
-sys/ioctl.h is not available on Windows (MinGW/MSVC).
-Correct the call to cogl_renderer_set_winsys_id:
(backend_cogl->cogl_renderer, COGL_WINSYS_ID_WGL) ->
(renderer, COGL_WINSYS_ID_WGL)
The property uses an array with the following CSS style syntax
[ top, right, bottom, left ] or
[ top, left/right, bottom ] or
[ top/bottom, left/right ] or
[ top/right/bottom/left ]
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=676367
Passing a NULL buffer to clutter_text_set_text() does not behave the same
way as passing an empty string "" (as specified in the documentation).
This was working as expected previously, but somehow the behaviour changed
at some point and created 2 new issues:
- Passing a NULL pointer will not reset the string
- If the ClutterText is editable, it will segfault in strcmp
Validations have been added to prevent this.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=675890
This fixes drop_action_unregister() to not call g_object_get_data()
on priv->stage if not yet resolved. This can happen if the action's
actor was destroyed before ever being mapped.
When the transition was removed from the scroll-actor manually,
to cancel a not-finished animation, the transition struct member
wasn't reset to NULL.
This fixes this problem, and removes the need for the struct member
to be reset manually when animation has completed.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=676334
When setting up the transition manually by calling
clutter_keyframe_transition_set_key_frame (transition, n, keys);
clutter_keyframe_transition_set_values (transition, n, values);
clutter_keyframe_transition_set_modes (transition, n, modes);
the frame doesn't have a valid interval when calling set_keys(), so we
need to check its existence and create it if necessary.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=676031
Chaining up to the parent's implementation of pick() is not enough: we
need to paint our children explicitly because of the compatibility mode
checks we use to avoid breaking custom containers.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=676088
We need to clip the children during picking as well as we do when
painting, to avoid reactive children outside of the visible area
receiving events.
This also allows us to refactor some common code into proper functions.
-Add configuration in Clutter projects to add option to build Clutter with
the GDK3 backend in addition to the Win32 backend
-Add another preconfigured clutter-config.h.win32_GDK which contains
backend configs for both GDK3 and Win32 windowing and input.
When asking for the preferred width and height of an actor, in case
only one of either the minimum or the natural width is set, the margin
offsets should also be applied.
When getting touch events, the device manager would try
to pass an invalid device to translate_axes().
clutter_event_set_device() will only update event->touch.device
for touch events, not event->motion.device, as used.
Fixes Totem crashing on mouse motion/button press when using
a touchpad.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=675371
The drop-cancel signal allows the drop action to cleanup its
state if the can-drop signal is refused. This is especially
useful if the drop action (or its target actor) is managing
any drop target animations.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=675336
The example code that is meant to be XIncluded into the API reference
should not be part of the interactive test suite: it's code that it is
meant to be used as a reference implementation - whereas the interactive
test suite should be allowed to be lean and test behaviour even in nasty
ways. In short: the test suite should not be the place where we show off
idiomatic code for educational purposes.
The introspection scanner has become slightly more annoying, in the hope
that people start fixing their annotations. As it turns out, it was the
right move.
It's time. Now that we have clutter_actor_allocate() respecting the
easing state of an actor, and that the LayoutManager animation virtual
functions have been deprecated, we can put ClutterAlpha on the chopping
block, and be done with it, once and for all.
So long, ClutterAlpha; and thanks for all the fish.
This semi-aborted API was broken for various reasons:
- it strongly depended on ClutterAlpha, a class we're trying to
deprecate;
- it requires a lot of boilerplate and copy-and-paste code;
- it requires a full relayout of the actor tree for something
that ought to be automatically handled by ClutterActor.
Now that clutter_actor_allocate() handles transitions using the easing
state of the actor, we can deprecate the LayoutManager API for the 1.x
series, and remove it for the 2.x series.
BoxLayout will use the easing state of the children it's allocating; the
current API is re-implemented in terms of an implicit easing state
forced on each child prior to allocating it.
Calling clutter_actor_allocate() should transition between the current
allocation and the new allocation, by using the defined implementation
of the easing state.
This means that:
clutter_actor_save_easing_state (actor);
clutter_actor_allocate (actor, &new_alloc, flags);
clutter_actor_restore_easing_state (actor);
will cause "actor" to transition between the current allocation and the
desired new allocation.
The trick is to ensure that this happens without invalidating the
entire actor tree, but only the portion of the tree that has the
transitioned actor as the local root. For this reason, we just call the
allocate() implementation from within the transition frame advancement,
without invalidating flags: the actor, after all, *has* a valid
allocation for the duration of the transition.
The :x-expand and :y-expand flags on ClutterActor are used to signal
that an actor should expand horizontally and/or vertically - i.e. that
its parent's layout management policy should try to assign extra space
to the actor when allocating it.
The expand flags are automatic: when set on a leaf node in the actor
tree, they will bubble up through the parent and grandparents up to the
top level actor; during allocation, the actors with children will lazily
compute whether their children needs to expand.
The TransitionGroup class is a logical container for running multiple
transitions.
TransitionGroup is not a Score: it is a Transition that advances each
Transition it contains using the delta between frames, and ensures that
all transitions are in a consistent state; these transitions are not
advanced by the master clock.
There are cases when we want to advance a timeline from another time
source. We cannot use _clutter_timeline_do_tick() directly, as that
assumes that the timeline is already playing, so we'll need to create a
wrapper that toggles the playing flag around it.
Given that we can create a ClutterInterval without an initial and final
values using g_object_new(), it stands to reason that we ought to be
able to create an instance when passing NULL GValue pointers to the
new_with_values() constructor as well.
We tend to use float comparison for structured data types like Vertex,
Point, and Size; we should take into consideration fluctuations in the
floating point representation as well.
Instead of a single new() constructor that both allocates and
initializes, split the allocation and initialization into two separate
functions for types that are typically used on the stack, and rarely
allocated on the heap, like ClutterPoint and friends.
This is also applied retroactively to ClutterActorBox and ClutterVertex,
given that the same considerations on usage apply to them as well; we
can add a return value to clutter_actor_box_init() and
clutter_vertex_init() in an ABI-compatible way, so that
clutter_actor_box_new() and clutter_vertex_new() can be effectively
reimplemented as "init (alloc ())".
Using a compound type property for position and size has various
advantages: it reduces the amount of checks; it reduces the amount
of notify signals to connect to; it reduces the amount of transitions
generated.
The ClutterCanvas content implementation should be used instead, to
avoid stringing along the ClutterTexture API and implementation.
This change requires some minor surgery, as the deprecated section
already contains an header for the previously deprecated methods; plus,
we don't want to deprecate clutter_cairo_set_source_color(). This means
creating a new header to be used for Cairo-related API.
The get_distance() API uses machine integers to compute the distance;
this means that on 32bit we can overflow the integer size. This gets
hidden by the fact that get_distance() returns an unsigned integer as
well.
In reality, ClutterPath is an unmitigated mess, and the only way to
actually fix it is to break API.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=652521
This commit adds a further conditional check for calling
clutter_actor_show() when adding a child to an actor. We cannot
unconditionally change the value of the show-on-set-parent property like
the original solution of commit 81b19a78f5
as that breaks the document invariant that show-on-set-parent will be
changed iff an actor is without a parent.
The new ADD_CHILD_SHOW_ON_SET_PARENT flag is part of the default and
legacy flags, thus retaining the default behaviour when adding a child;
the flag is not passed when reordering the list of children, which means
we ignore the state of the show-on-set-parent property.
The conformance test suite fully passes, including the newly added test
to verify that changing the paint order does not trigger visibility.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=674510
This reverts commit 81b19a78f5.
The commit breaks the conformance test unit for the invariants we
guarantee for the 1.x API:
ERROR:actor-invariants.c:307:actor_show_on_set_parent: assertion failed: (show_on_set_parent)
It's possible to run Clutter with the 'null' input backend, which means
that clutter_device_manager_get_default() may return NULL. In the future
we may add a default dummy device manager, but right now it's safer to
just add a simple NULL check in the places where we ask for the device
manager.
I can't think of any reason why it would do this and there's no
comment explaining it so let's just remove it. The global fog state
has been removed in Cogl 2.0 so it will cause problems later.
Reviewed-by: Emmanuele Bassi <ebassi@linux.intel.com>
CoglVertexBuffer is deprecated so here is a fairly simple replacement
to use the experimental CoglPrimitive API.
Reviewed-by: Emmanuele Bassi <ebassi@linux.intel.com>
Drop a bunch of variables that are not meant to be used by Cally; also,
drop the wrong library name from the Libs key: Clutter has a single
shared library, now.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=674105
The interface looked like a good idea around the time Clutter 0.2 was
out, but in reality we never had a proper, and supported implementation
outside of clutter-gst - thus, ClutterMedia was acting like a wrapper
around GStreamer, leading to hilarious issues of impedence mismatch
between API and all sorts of indirection issues typical of wrong
abstractions.
In theory, ClutterMedia should have been deprecated and removed before
we hit 1.0, but we kept flip-flopping on the issue.
For 2.0, it's time to take it out.
And shoot it in the face.
It's been a year and change, and two stable releases, since we
introduced the paint volume mechanism to allow actors to paint outside
their allocation safely in environments that support clipped redraws.
The time has come to flip the switch, and return a valid paint volume,
matching the actor's allocation, by default - at least for Actor
instances from classes that do not override paint() and
get_paint_volume().
If an actor has a paint signal handler then it's the user responsability
not to paint outside the allocation - and to suffer the consequences of
doing so; in an ideal world, paint() would not be a signal in the first
place anyway. Plus, the idea that painting can happen at any time and
still have a valid surface greatly conflicts with the design goal of
making Clutter's rendering operations fully retained into a render tree.
We can still revert this commit before spinning 1.12, if need be.
When removing the last Action, Constraint, or Effect, we should also be
clearing the corresponding MetaGroup: code inside ClutterActor relies on
NULL checks, and changing them all to check for NULL && n_items == 0
would not be fun.
configure.ac defines XINPUT_2_2 if XI 2.2 support was found. The code
expects XINPUT_2_2 in the device manager, but HAVE_XINPUT_2_2 in the x11
backend.
On newer X servers, the latter causes a BadValue when XIQueryDevice sends a
different major/minor than gdk's device manager (gnome-control-center).
Signed-off-by: Peter Hutterer <peter.hutterer@who-t.net>
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=673961
We need to remove the transition only if the current repeat is equal to
the number of repeats, and if the transition was marked as remove on
complete. Otherwise, the transition has to remain where it is.
The opacity internal setter will do it for us, and it will take into
consideration any eventual flatten effect applied to the actor.
This unbreaks the actor-offscreen-redirect conformance test.
The get_geometry() implementation is broken on multi-head systems; the
only solution is to use XRandR to get the size of the CRTC that contains
the stage.
In XInput 2, the proximity events of XInput 1 have been replaced by an
axis on a valuator class. This means that, on devices that support
proximity information, for instance pens of a tablet, you will start
receiving events with the distance as an axis value - similarly to how
the pressure and tilt are presented in the API.
We were using g_list_foreach() prior to the first Apocalypse, and that
function is resilient against changes to the list while iterating it;
since we are not using a GList any more, we need handle this case
ourselves.
This also avoids the warning
Cogl-WARNING **: ./cogl-buffer.c:215: GL error (1285): Out of memory
generated by cogl_buffer_map when the CoglBuffer has zero length.
When the easing state has a duration of zero milliseconds we can skip
the entire create_transition() call inside set_width() and set_height(),
to avoid what may be a costly call to get_preferred_*.
If we update a transition that is currently playing, we need to check
the current easing state, and look at the eventual duration, in case
the user wants to cancel the transition.
Instead of checking the duration of the current easing state we should
check if there's a transition in progress, and update it
unconditionally.
If there is no easing state, or the easing state has a duration of zero
milliseconds, then create_transition() should bail out early and set the
requested final state.
This allows us to write:
clutter_actor_save_easing_state (actor);
clutter_actor_set_x (actor, 200);
clutter_actor_restore_easing_state (actor);
[...]
clutter_actor_set_x (actor, 100);
and have the second set_x() update the easing in progress, instead of
being ignored.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=672945
Commit 80626e7584 removed an
IN_DESTRUCTION check from within the add_child_internal() method,
outlining an option for bringing it back. It was too late for the 1.10
cycle to do it, and eventually pick up the pieces, but now that we're
at the beginning of the 1.11 cycle we can restore it, and add checks
elsewhere to balance it.
This patch fixes clutter to not crash when multiple animations share
the same timeline and the actors are explicitly destroyed before
the timeline completes (bug 672890)
Some of the Clutter code was using GL types for the primitive types
such as GLint and GLubyte and then passing these to Cogl. This doesn't
make much sense because the Cogl functions directly take native C
types. This patch just replaces them with either a native C type or a
glib type.
Some of the cogl conformance tests are trying to directly call GL for
example to test creating a foreign texture. These tests have been
changed to manually define the GL enum values instead of relying on a
GL header to define them.
This is necessary because Cogl may soon stop including a GL header
from its public headers.
Reviewed-by: Emmanuele Bassi <ebassi@linux.intel.com>
The disjunction operator was misspelt as -O which tests whether the
following file is owned by the calling user. This doesn't take enough
arguments so bash was showing an error and the test was always
failing. This meant that NEED_XKB_UTILS was always false which should
have broken the build but the Makefile was mistakenly including
clutter-xkb-utils.c again if SUPPORT_WAYLAND is defined.
See 1b77565e for reference.
Reviewed-by: Emmanuele Bassi <ebassi@linux.intel.com>
The commit 90e5088 added some extra compiler warning options that were
triggering warnings when enabling the wayland build due to missing
header includes. This adds those header includes in.
Reviewed-by: Robert Bragg <robert@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Emmanuele Bassi <ebassi@linux.intel.com>
Because the wayland-server-protocol.h header includes symbols that
collide with wayland-client-protocol.h Cogl now provides top level
<cogl/cogl-wayland-server.h> and <cogl/cogl-wayland-client.h> headers so
that applications can ensure they only include one of the wayland
protocol headers in a particular compilation unit. This updates clutter
accordingly to include those headers.
Reviewed-by: Neil Roberts <neil@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Emmanuele Bassi <ebassi@linux.intel.com>
Should not have been there in the first place: the animatable will be
set either using ClutterTransition API, or when adding the transition
to a ClutterActor.
When adding a transition to a ClutterActor, the actor should hold a
reference on it, and release it only when we remove it. This makes
transitions just like other objects held by ClutterActor.
The ::completed signal emission is part of the current cycle; repeating,
like the automatic reverse of the timeline's direction, happens after
the ::completed chain of handlers has been called.
We still use XKeycodeToKeysym() in a fallback path in case we're not
running on a decent enough system; XKeycodeToKeysym() is deprecated as
of version 1.12 of the X server, but since I don't want to copy a bunch
of code from GDK or, god forbid, from Xlib, for a fallback path, it's
probably more reasonable to just silence the compiler warnings - at
least until we can drop all the X compatibility crap, and just use
modern, or semi-modern, API.
Some events may contain precise scrolling information coming from
devices like trackpads and touchscreens. ClutterEvent should allow
setting and getting this information.
While you can get a per-transition notification of completion, it can be
convenient to also have a way to notify that all the transitions
involving an actor are complete. A simple signal triggered by the
removal of the last transition fits the bill pretty neatly.
When handling Configure events from the X server we update the
internal copy of the window size. Unfortunately we may be updating the
wrong stage implementation because we use the one related to the event
translator (which is the first created stage).
This patch fix flickering/redrawning issues with multi-stage by
looking for the right stage implementation associated with an XEvent.
Signed-off-by: Lionel Landwerlin <lionel.g.landwerlin@linux.intel.com>
If restore_easing_state() is called on the last easing state on the
stack, clean up the stack, so that we don't leave stale pointers
around to later segfault on.
When setting the easing mode, duration, or delay without having ever
called clutter_actor_save_easing_state(). It's confusing, and not
really nice.
In the future, we'll have a default easing state implicitly created by
the actor itself, but for the time being explicitly opting in is
preferrable.
If the pointer is inside the window frame when it's shown then we need
to synthesize and emit a NSMouseEnterEvent ourselves, as Quartz won't
do it for us.
This is a bit of a blind commit - but it's taken from an equivalent
patch that has been verified to work in GDK.
Yes, it's not really the proper GL name for a linear-on-every-axis of a
texture plus linear-between-mipmap-levels minification filter, but it
has three redeeming qualities as a name:
- LINEAR_MIPMAP_LINEAR sucks, as it introduces GL concepts like
mipmaps in the API naming, while we're trying to avoid that;
- people using GL already know what 'trilinear' means in this context
without going all Khronos on their asses;
- we're using 2D textures anyway, so 'linear on two axes and linear
between mipmap levels' can be effectively approximated to
'trilinear'.
I mean, if even the OpenGL official wiki says:
Unfortunately, what most people think of as "trilinear" is not linear
filtering of a 3D texture, but what in OpenGL terms is GL_LINEAR mag
filter and GL_LINEAR_MIPMAP_LINEAR in the min filter in a 2D texture.
That is, it is bilinear filtering of each appropriate mipmap level,
and doing a third linear filter between the adjacent mipmap levels.
Hence the term "trilinear".
-- http://www.opengl.org/wiki/Texture
then the horse has already been flogged to death, and I don't intend to
be accused of necrophilia and sadism by flogging it some more.
Prior art: every single GL tutorial in the history of ever;
CoreAnimation's scaling filter enumerations.
If people want to start using 1D or 3D textures they they are probably
going to be using Cogl API directly, and that has the GL naming scheme
for minification and magnification filters anyway.
At least for the time being, we only expose the parts of the API that we
want to use internally and for new, out-of-tree Content implementations.
The full PaintNode tree API will be made public in 1.12 once we branch
master.
It's a bit late in the game for changing the emission of the paint
signal with actors that use paint nodes - mostly because we have both
implicit paint nodes (background color, content) and explicit paint
nodes (the paint_node virtual).
When we branch for 1.12 we can revert this change.
It's safer, and consistent with the rest of Clutter, to make sure that
the template pipeline we use for ClutterTextureNode has its wrap mode
set to clamp-to-edge.
Both ClutterCanvas and ClutterImage should use the minification and
magnification filters set on the actor, just like the use the content
box and the paint opacity.
The ::paint signal is the old way to paint an actor; the paint_node()
virtual function is the new way. It's still not possible to traverse the
whole scene graph and build a render tree of PaintNode instances, but
with this change we simultaneously cut out the ::paint signal emission
from the critical path for actors that are using the new PaintNode-based
API, and we retain backward compatibility in the interim period between
1.10 and 2.0.
Instead of our homegrown string building; this at least ensures that
we're generating proper data, instead of random strings. Plus, using
JsonNode and JsonBuilder, we can ask the PaintNode subclasses to
serialize themselves in a sensible way.
ClutterContent is an interface for creating delegate objects that handle
what an actor is going to paint.
Since they are a newly added type, they only hook into the new PaintNode
based API.
The position and size of the content is controlled in part by the
content's own preferred size, and by the ClutterContentGravity
enumeration.
The ::paint-node virtual inside ClutterActor is what we want people to
use when painting their actors.
Right now, it's a new code path, that gets called while painting; the
paint_node() implementation should only paint the actor itself, and not
its children — they will get their own paint_node() called when needed.
Internally, ClutterActor will automatically create a dummy PaintNode and
paint the background color; then control will be handed out to the
implementation on the class. This is required to maintain compatibility
with the old ::paint signal emission.
Once we are able to get rid of the paint (and pick) sequences, we'll
switch to a fully retained render tree.
Now that we have a proper scene graph API, we should split out the
rendering part from the logical and event handling part.
ClutterPaintNode is a lightweight fundamental type that encodes only the
paint operations: pipeline state and geometry. At its most simple, is a
way to structure setting up the programmable pipeline using a
CoglPipeline, and submitting Cogl primitives. The important take away
from this API is that you are not allowed to call Cogl API like
cogl_set_source() or cogl_primitive_draw() directly.
The interesting approach to this is that, in the future, we should be
able to move to a purely retained mode: we will decide which actors need
to be painted, they will update their own branch of the render graph,
and we'll take the render graph and build all the rendering commands
from that.
For the 1.x API, we will have to maintain invariants and the existing
behaviour, but as soon as we can break API, the old paint signal will
just go away, and Actors will only be allowed to manipulate the render
tree.
As it turns out, we do end up recursing inside the ::paint signal
emission - especially inside the conformance test suite.
This thoroughly sucks - and we'll only be able to fix it properly
when we bump API for 2.0.
ClutterActor should be able to hold all transitions, even the ones that
have been explicitly created.
This will allow to add new transitions types in the future, like the
keyframe-based one, or the transition group.
It should be possible to ask a timeline what is its duration, taking
into account eventual repeats, and which repeat is the one currently
in progress.
These two functions allow writing animations that depend on the current
state of another timeline.
It should be possible to set up the delay of a transition, but since
we start the Transition instance before returning control to the caller,
we cannot use clutter_actor_get_transition() to do it without something
extra-awkward, like:
transition = clutter_actor_get_transition (actor, "width");
clutter_timeline_stop (transition);
clutter_timeline_set_delay (transition, 1000);
clutter_timeline_start (transition);
for each property involved. It's much easier to add a delay to the
easing state of an actor.
Clutter is meant to be, and I quote from the README, a toolkit:
for creating fast, compelling, portable, and dynamic graphical
user interfaces
and yet the default mode of operation for setting an actor's state on
the scene graph (position, size, opacity, rotation, scaling, depth,
etc.) is *not* dynamic. We assume a static UI, and then animate it.
This is the wrong way to design an API for a toolkit meant to be used to
create animated user interfaces. The default mode of operation should be
to implicitly animate every state transition, and only allow skipping
the animation if the user consciously decides to do so — i.e. the design
tenet of the API should be to make The Right Thing™ by default, and make
it really hard (or even impossible) to do The Wrong Thing™.
So we should identify "animatable" properties, i.e. those properties
that should be implicitly animated by ClutterActor, and use the
animation framework we provide to tween the transitions between the
current state and the desired state; the implicit animation should
happen when setting these properties using the public accessors, and not
through some added functionality. For instance, the following:
clutter_actor_set_position (actor, newX, newY);
should not make the actor jump to the (newX, newY) point; it should
tween the actor's position between the current point and the desired
point.
Since we have to maintain backward compatibility with existing
applications, we still need to mark the transitions explicitly, but we
can be smart about it, and treat transition states as a stack that can
be pushed and popped, e.g.:
clutter_actor_save_easing_state (actor);
clutter_actor_set_easing_duration (actor, 500);
clutter_actor_set_position (actor, newX, newY);
clutter_actor_set_opacity (actor, newOpacity);
clutter_actor_restore_easing_state (actor);
And we can even start stacking animations, e.g.:
clutter_actor_save_easing_state (actor);
clutter_actor_set_easing_duration (actor, 500);
clutter_actor_set_position (actor, newX, newY);
clutter_actor_save_easing_state (actor);
clutter_actor_set_easing_duration (actor, 500);
clutter_actor_set_easing_mode (actor, CLUTTER_LINEAR);
clutter_actor_set_opacity (actor, newOpacity);
clutter_actor_set_depth (actor, newDepth);
clutter_actor_restore_easing_state (actor);
clutter_actor_restore_easing_state (actor);
And so on, and so forth.
The implementation takes advantage of the newly added Transition API,
which uses only ClutterTimeline sub-classes and ClutterInterval, to cut
down the amount of signal emissions and memory management of object
instances; as well of using the ClutterAnimatable interface for custom
properties and interpolation of values.
As a convenience for the C API.
Language bindings should already be using the GValue variants.
This commit also moves the custom progress functions out of the
clutter-interval.c, as they are meant to be generic interpolation
functions and not ClutterInterval-specific.
The ::paint, ::queue-redraw, and ::queue-relayout signals should be
marked as no-recurse and no-hooks; these signals are emitted *a lot*
during each frame, and since GLib has a bunch of optimizations for
signals with no closures, we should try and squeeze every single CPU
cycle we can.
Dist clutter-version.h for use under non-autotools-based build
environments (e.g. MSVC) as this header is now generic under the
systems Clutter supports
Checked with Emmanuele Bassi on IRC.
The frame_budget member of ClutterMasterClock is only enabled when
CLUTTER_ENABLE_DEBUG is enabled, so fix the build with this.
Checked with Emmanuele Bassi on IRC.
Normally this leak goes unnoticed because basic fundamental types
are typically used with clutter_actor_animate(), the leak shows up
if boxed or object types are passed (such as ClutterVertex in the
case I stumbled upon).
The ClutterBrightnessContrastEffect effect class allows changing the
brightness and contrast levels of an actor.
Modified-by: Emmanuele Bassi <ebassi@linux.intel.com>
Modified-by: Neil Roberts <neil@linux.intel.com>
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=656156
We can use the __COUNTER__ macro or, failing that, the __LINE__ macro to
ensure that we don't declare dummy variables more than once with the
same name.