When disposing a ClutterWaylandSurface we now make sure to unref any
pipeline we created and unref any surface buffer textures we created.
Reviewed-by: Neil Roberts <neil@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Emmanuele Bassi <ebassi@linux.intel.com>
There was a GArray member named damage that wasn't being used which this
patch removes.
Reviewed-by: Neil Roberts <neil@linux.intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Emmanuele Bassi <ebassi@linux.intel.com>
The experimental cogl_pipeline_new() api was recently changed so it
explicitly takes a CoglContext. This updates all calls to
cogl_pipeline_new() in clutter accordingly.
* clutter_wayland_input_device_get_wl_input_device for the input device
* clutter_wayland_stage_get_wl_surface for the Wayland surface
* clutter_wayland_stage_get_wl_shell_surface for the shell surface
Also update the code to set the size of the stage to set it to the size of the
output. In future versions of the Wayland protocol we'll get a configure
message advising of us of the size we can be to achieve fullscreen.
Semantic changes to Wayland means that we cannot rely on the compositor
setting a pointer buffer for us if set it to nil. The first part of fixing
this is to create an shm buffer containing the bytes for our cursor.
The best way to do this currently is to load the cursor from the well known
location where weston instals its cursor images. The code to implemente this
was derivedlifted from the Wayland backend in GTK+.
The Wayland protocol now has events represent when a pointer enters the
surface and when it leaves again.
For leaves the surface is not set in the event, for enters the surface is set.
Simply use this to determine whether to emit CLUTTER_ENTER or CLUTTER_LEAVE.
Previously the wl_shell object held the methods that allowed a client to
request changes to the shell's state associated with a surface. These methods
have now been moved to a wl_shell_surface object.
This change allows configure events to be handled inside the stage rather than
the backend.
This makes the option_xkb_* symbols declared for the evdev device manager
and the wayland device manager private so we don't get symbol collisions
if both of these backends are enabled.
Reviewed-by: Emmanuele Bassi <ebassi@linux.intel.com>
This adds a --enable-wayland-compositor configure option which will add
support for a ClutterWaylandSurface actor which can be used to aid in
writing Wayland compositors using Clutter by providing a ClutterActor to
represent Wayland client surfaces.
Notably this configure option isn't tied into any particular backend
since conceptually the compositor support can be used in conjunction
with any clutter backend that has corresponding Cogl support.
Reviewed-by: Emmanuele Bassi <ebassi@linux.intel.com>
This updates Wayland support in line with upstream changes to the Wayland
API and protocol.
This update means we no longer use the Cogl stub winsys so a lot of code
that had to manually interact with EGL and implement a swap_buffers
mechanism could be removed and instead we now depend on Cogl to handle
those things for us.
This update also adds an input device manager consistent with other
clutter backends.
Note: to use the client side "wayland" clutter backend you need to have
built Cogl with --enable-wayland-egl-platform. If Cogl has been built
with support for multiple winsys backends then you should run
applications with COGL_RENDERER=EGL in the environment.
Reviewed-by: Emmanuele Bassi <ebassi@linux.intel.com>
All StageWindow implementation already have back pointers, but we need a
unified API to actually set them from the generic code path; we can use
properties on the StageWindow interface — though this requires fixing
all backends at the same time, to avoid GObject complaining.
Input backends are, in some cases, independent from the windowing system
backends; we can initialize input handling using a model similar to what
we use for windowing backends, including an environment variable and
compile-/run-time checks.
This model allows us to remove the backend-specific init_events(), and
use a generic implementation directly inside the base ClutterBackend
class, thus further reducing the backend-specific code that every
platform has to implement.
This requires some minor surgery to every single backend, to make sure
that the function exposed to initialize the event loop is similar and
performs roughly the same operations.
The Clutter backend split is opaque enough that should allow us to just
build all possible backends inside the same shared object, and select
the wanted backend at initialization time.
This requires some work in the build system, as well as the
initialization code, to remove duplicate functions that might cause
conflicts at build and link time. We also need to defer all the checks
of the internal state of the platform-specific API to run-time type
checks.
The g_atexit() function has been deprecated in GLib as it is a fairly
bad idea in basically all cases.
We could probably use a GCC destructor if we didn't care about
portability, but for the time being we just remove the atexit() handler
that disposed the backend.
The ClutterGeometry type is a poor substitute of cairo_rectangle_int_t,
with unsigned integers for width and height to complicate matters.
Let's remove the internal usage of ClutterGeometry and switch to the
rectangle type from Cairo.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=656663
Cogl has now been split out into a standalone project with a separate
repository at git://git.gnome.org/cogl. From now on the Clutter build
will now simply look for a cogl-1.0 pkg-config file to find a suitable
Cogl library to link against at build time.
This gives us a way to clearly track the internal Cogl API that Clutter
depends on. The aim is to split Cogl out from Clutter into a standalone
3D graphics API and eventually we want to get rid of any private
interfaces for Clutter so its useful to have a handle on that task.
Actually it's not as bad as I was expecting though.
Recently _cogl_swap_buffers_notify was added (in 142b229c5c) so that
Cogl would be notified when Clutter performs a swap buffers request for
a given onscreen framebuffer. It was expected this would be required for
the recent cogl_read_pixel optimization that was implemented (ref
1bdb0e6e98) but in the end it wasn't used.
Since it wasn't used in the end this patch removes the API.
* nobled/wayland-fixes2:
wayland: fix shm buffers
wayland: set renderable type on dummy surface
wayland: check for egl extensions explicitly
wayland: fall back to shm buffers if drm fails
wayland: add shm buffer code
wayland: make buffer handling generic
wayland: really fix buffer format selection
wayland: fix pixel format
wayland: clean up buffer creation code
wayland: don't require the surfaceless extensions
wayland: check for API-specific surfaceless extension
wayland: fix GLES context creation
wayland: use EGL_NO_SURFACE
wayland: update to new api
wayland: fix connecting to default socket
fix ClutterContainer docs
We need to *write* to the shared memory, not read from it.
cogl_texture_from_data() is read-only, it doesn't keep
the data in sync with the texture.
Instead, we have to call cogl_texture_get_data() ourselves
to sync manually.
eglGetProcAddress() returns non-null function pointers
whether or not they're actually supported by the driver,
since it can be used before any driver gets loaded. So
we have to check if the extensions are advertised first,
which requires having an initialized display, so we split
the display creation code into its own function.
The exception to extension-checking is EGL_MESA_drm_display,
since by definition it's needed before any display is even
created.
Wayland visuals refer to a pixel's bytes in order from
most significant to least significant, while the
one-byte-per-component Cogl formats refer to the order
of increasing memory addresses, so converting between
the two depends on the system's endianness.
The height was being set from the ClutterGeometry in some parts
and from the stage in others. And since both callers of this
function pass &stage_wayland->allocation as the geometry anyway,
the stage argument isn't really even needed.