Instead of listing every public symbol inside an ancillary file, we can
use compiler annotations. This scheme is also used by GLib and GTK+.
The symbols file is left in tree until the Visual Studio rules are
fixed, but it's not used any more during distcheck.
I double-checked that the exposed ABI is the same before and after this
change, except for symbols that were never meant to be public in the
first place, and that escaped our attention when we generated the first
version of the symbols file.
Instead of having its own evdev input device processing implementation,
make clutter's evdev backend use libinput to do input device processing
for it.
Two GObject parameters of ClutterInputDeviceEvdev (sysfs-path and
device-path) are removed as they are not used any more.
Before ClutterDeviceManagerEvdev had one virtual core keyboard and one
virtual core pointer device. These are now instead separated into seats,
which all have one virtual core keyboard and pointer device respectively.
The 'global' core keyboard and pointer device are the core keyboard and
pointer device of the first seat that is created.
A ClutterInputDeviceEvdev can, as before, both represent a real physical
device or a virtual device, but is now instead created either via
_clutter_input_device_evdev_new() for real devices, and
_clutter_input_device_new_virtual() for virtual devices.
XKB state and button state is moved to the seat structure and is thus
separated per seat. Seats are not a concept exposed outside of clutter's
evdev backend.
Signed-off-by: Jonas Ådahl <jadahl@gmail.com>
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=720566
In order to build the cookbook examples, we need a version of Cogl-Path
that correctly exports all its symbols; this has been fixed in Cogl only
after the 1.17.2 snapshot was made.
The current conformance test suite is suboptimal in many ways.
All tests are built into the same binary, which makes adding new tests,
builting tests, and running groups of tests much more awkward than it
needs to be. The first issue, especially, raises the bar of contribution
in a significant way, while the other two take their toll on the
maintainer. All of these changes were introduced back when we had both
Clutter and Cogl tests in tree, and because we were building the test
suite for every single change; since then, Cogl moved out of tree with
all its tests, and we build the conformance test suite only when running
the `check` make target.
This admittedly large-ish commit changes the way the conformance test
suite works, taking advantage of the changes in the GTest API and test
harness.
First of all, all tests are now built separately, using their own test
suite as defined by each separate file. All tests run under the TAP
harness provided by GTest and Automake, to gather a proper report using
the Test Anything Protocol without using the `gtester` harness and the
`gtester-report` script. We also use the Makefile rules provided by GLib
to vastly simplify the build environment for the conformance test suite.
On top of the changes for the build and harness, we also provide new API
for creating and running test suites for Clutter. The API is public,
because the test suite has to use it, but it's minimal and mostly
provides convenience wrappers around GTest that make writing test units
for Clutter easier.
This commit disables all tests in the conformance test suite, as well as
moving the data files outside of the tests/data directory; the next few
commits will re-establish the conformance test suite separately so we
can check that everything works in a reliable way.
In Cogl 1.17 libcogl-path has been split out from libcogl and now has
its own corresponding cogl-path-1.0 pkg-config file which we check for
during build configuration.
Note: this bumps the required cogl version up to 1.17.1
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
This reverts commit b6fc4a810f.
It seems that the Cogl/Cogl-Path split was not meant to break API/ABI,
so we should not check for a new dependency. Let's revert the commit,
and wait for Cogl to get fixed instead.
The Wayland backend is based on Cogl, so we need to turn on the
SUPPORT_COGL flag to avoid breaking the build; this always went
unnoticed because we usually build the Wayland client backend
with the X11 backend.
Reported-by: Ross Burton <ross.burton@intel.com>
Not every single one, but things that we care about to avoid breaking
build on other platforms, or for security issues, should not be allowed.
We should not force everyone to use -Werror, though; and we should still
allow building Clutter without any special flag.
Unlike gcov, lcov provides a nice HTML output that allows immediate
visualization of the current coverage.
The updates of the build system have been taken from GLib, which has
been using lcov for a while with good results.
For now, it just generates a simple horizontal slide (by writing
to /dev/uinput) and checks that the stage gets the events at the
expected coordinates.
The test won't run if it doesn't have read/write permissions to
/dev/uinput.
It also adds OS_LINUX to config.h.
This should allow nicer build automation and cross-compilation support.
The former --disable-conformance configure switch has been deprecated by
the --disable-tests one, which is more encompassing as it disables the
whole test suite.
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.
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
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>