When the blended region was empty, meaning we didn't have to paint
anything blended -- the case for an app update -- was drawing the
entire window blended, because of a think-o in the complex and
complicated logic.
Fix this so that we don't draw anything for the blended region when
empty.
region first
If we're going to render the entire texture blended, then don't bother
painting the unblended stuff, since we're just going to draw on top
anyway.
Connecting to size-changed is wrong -- size-changed tells us when
we *told* the X server or resize the window. For X11, we're sort of
guaranteed that the surface will be updated at some point before the
next frame, but for Xwayland, we can't be sure that the new surface is
attached at this point.
This fixes weird artifacts when resizing apps like xclock.
The input region was set on the shaped texture, but the shaped texture
was never picked properly, as it was never set to be reactive. Move the
pick implementation and reactivity to the MetaSurfaceActor, and update
the code everywhere else to expect a MetaSurfaceActor.
We want to remove a bunch of auxilliary duties from the MetaWindowActor
and MetaSurfaceActor, including some details of how culling is done.
Move the unobscured region culling code to the MetaShapedTexture, which
helps the actor become "more independent".
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=720631
When we traversed down to reset the culling state, previously we
would just skip any actors that wanted culling. In order to properly
reset the unobscured_region before painting, we need to traverse down
to these places as well. Do this by calling cull_out with NULL regions
for both arguments, and adapt existing cull_out implementations to
match.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=720631
It seems that this code is trying to transform from "surface coordinates"
(the size of texture that's being displayed) to "actor coordinates"
(the actor's allocation), but I can't find any place where the two are
different. As such, let's just go back to using "surface coordinates"
everywhere and see what breaks.
For x defined below, x == -INT32_MAX assuming that the arithmetic
expression actually uses the fpu.
float f = 1.0f;
int32_t x = INT32_MAX * f;
This would result in the calculated clip width/height to be -INT_MAX
if the damage width/height is INT_MAX. To solve this, use a double
variable instead.
Signed-off-by: Jonas Ådahl <jadahl@gmail.com>
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=705502
Make MetaWindowActor chain up to the generic default MetaCullable
implementation, and remove the helper methods for MetaSurfaceActor
and MetaShapedTexture.
To properly resize clients, we need to send them configure events
with the size we computed from the constraint system, and
then check if the new size they ask is compatible with
our expectation.
Note that this does not handle interactive resizing yet, it
merely makes the API calls work for wayland clients.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=707401
If we skip getting the clip rectangle because we don't have an
allocation or a texture, don't intersect with the visible region.
This avoids a pixman warning of an invalid rectangle.
Reviewed by drago01 in IRC.
When we get a damage event we update the window by calling
meta_shaped_texture_update_area which queues a redraw on the actor.
We can avoid that for obscured regions by comparing the damage area to
our visible area.
This patch causes _NET_WM_FRAME_DRAWN messages to be not sent in some cases
where they should be sent; they will be added back in a later commit.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=703332
When drawing entirely opaque regions, we traditionally kept blending on
simply because it made the code more convenient and obvious to handle.
However, this can cause lots of performance issues on GPUs that aren't
too powerful, as they have to readback the buffer underneath.
Keep track of the opaque region set by windows (through _NET_WM_OPAQUE_REGION,
Wayland opaque_region hints, standard RGB32 frame masks or similar), and draw
those rectangles separately through a different path with blending turned off.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=707019
Split out pipeline creation to a separate function so that we don't
have so much dense code in the paint function itself, and remove some
indentation levels.
Also, don't use our own template for the unmasked pipeline, since it
has nothing different from the default pipeline template.
We also don't store the pipelines anymore since their creation isn't
really helping us; we set the mask texture and paint texture on every
paint anyway.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=707019
Remove window_surfaces, as the FIXME asks for. We don't need it
because we can obtain the surface from the MetaWindow, and
follow the wayland compositor path for both types of clients.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=705818
This adds support for running mutter as a hybrid X and Wayland
compositor. It runs a headless XWayland server for X applications
that presents wayland surfaces back to mutter which mutter can then
composite.
This aims to not break Mutter's existing support for the traditional X
compositing model which means a single build of Mutter can be
distributed supporting the traditional model and the new Wayland based
compositing model.
TODO: although building with --disable-wayland has at least been tested,
I still haven't actually verified that running as a traditional
compositor isn't broken currently.
Note: At this point no input is supported
Note: multiple authors have contributed to this patch:
Authored-by: Robert Bragg <robert@linux.intel.com>
Authored-by: Neil Roberts <neil@linux.intel.com>
Authored-by: Rico Tzschichholz.
Authored-by: Giovanni Campagna <gcampagna@src.gnome.org>
We now track whether a window has an input shape specified via the X
Shape extension. Intersecting that with the bounding shape (as required
by the X Shape extension) we use the resulting rectangles to paint
window silhouettes when picking. As well as improving the correctness of
picking this should also be much more efficient because typically when
only picking solid rectangles then the need to actually render and issue
a read_pixels request can be optimized away and instead the picking is
done on the cpu.
Instead of defining CLUTTER_ENABLE_EXPERIMENTAL_API and
COGL_ENABLE_EXPERIMENTAL_API in individual source files, enable
them on the command line. We weren't tracking exactly what pieces of
experimental API we were using and we were using the experimental
API in most source files that used Clutter and Cogl, so the
local #defines were annoying rather than useful.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=685463
This effectively makes MetaShapedTexture not a MetaShapedTexture, but a simple
and dumb MetaMaskedTexture, with an optimization for clipped regions.
We're doing this as the mask may need to be more complicated than made of
a cairo path -- we eventually want GTK+ to draw the entire frame background,
which we'll then scan.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=676052
As we want GTK+ to paint the mask on an A8, we can't simply use a cairo
path. A later commit will make this into a simple masked texture, and
meta-window-actor will be in control of the mask.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=676052
Cogl now has public experimental API to create a rectangle texture
which we can use instead of creating a foreign texture with GL. This
avoids Mutter depending on Cogl including a GL header from its public
headers which it might not do in future.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=672711
Since Cogl doesn't support multi-texturing with sliced textures and the
shape texture is combined with the texture-from-pixmap texture we need
to make sure we never construct a sliced mask texture. This patch simply
passes the COGL_TEXTURE_NO_SLICE flag to cogl_texture_from_data when
creating the shape mask texture.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=674731
The experimental Cogl api cogl_texture_pixmap_new() was recently changed
so it now expects an explicit CoglContext argument and it can also
return exceptions now via a GError. This patch updates mutters use of
the api accordingly.