Commit Graph

27303 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Akihiko Odaki
a41c30338f backend/native: Calculate refresh rate in double-precision
The old calculation was introduced to improve the precision
with commit c16a5ec1cf.

Here, I call the calculation as "revision 2", and the
calculation even older as "revision 1", and the new
calculation introduced with this commit as "reivion 3".

Revision 2 has two problems:
1. The calculation is mixed with fixed-point numbers and
   floating-point numbers.

To overcome the precision loss of fixed-point numbers division,
it first "calculates refresh rate in milliHz first for extra
precision", but this requires converting the value back to Hz.
An extra calculation has performance and precision costs.
It is also hard to understand for programmers.

2. The calculation has a bias.

In the process, it does:
refresh += (drm_mode->vtotal / 2);
It prevents the value from being rounded to a smaller value in
a fixed-point integer arithmetics, but it only adds a small
bias (0.0005) and consumes some fraction bits for
floating point arithmetic.

Revision 3, introduced with this commit always uses
double-precision floating-point values for true precision and
to ease understanding of this code. It also removes the bias.

Another change is that it now has two internal values, numerator
and denominator. Revision 1 also calculated those two values
first, and later performed a division with them, which minimizes
the precision loss caused by divisions. This method has risks of
overflowing the two values and revision 1 caused problems due to
that, but revision 3 won't thanks to double-precision. Therefore,
revision 3 will theoretically have the result identical with
the calculation with infinite-precision.

Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1737>
2021-03-05 14:37:48 +00:00
Jonas Dreßler
504af40c69 window: Don't stop irrelevant TOUCH_END events during window grab ops
During window grab ops we only react to touch events that have the
pointer emulating sequence, all other events should be propagated.

Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/427>
2021-03-04 22:46:20 +00:00
Jonas Dreßler
ef1b101821 window: Handle TOUCH_BEGIN events separately during grab ops
Handle the case of a TOUCH_BEGIN event during window dragging separately
instead of treating it like a TOUCH_UPDATE event: Simply return TRUE to
make Clutter stop event propagation if it's the pointer emulating
sequence and let Clutter propagate the event if it isn't.

Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/427>
2021-03-04 22:46:20 +00:00
Jonas Dreßler
9889e6dadd window: Cancel window grab ops on TOUCH_CANCEL events
Window dragging should be cancelled when the touch sequences we're using
are no longer available. Also listen to TOUCH_CANCEL events if the
window is grabbed and cancel the grab op when a TOUCH_CANCEL event
happens.

Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/427>
2021-03-04 22:46:20 +00:00
Jonas Ådahl
67acf99314 remote-desktop/session: Add CapsLockState and NumLockState properties
Will be used by remote desktop services that want to try to affect the
end result of these. We cannot let it set these directly, as these needs
to be done using virtual key events to not cause issues in all the XKB
state tracking, so remote desktop services try to deal with this
themself if they need to.

Closes: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/issues/1342
Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1739>
2021-03-04 17:39:08 +00:00
Jonas Ådahl
ce3fa3938a clutter/keymap: Make caps and num lock state properties
This removes the responsibility of tracking these from the backend to
the base object. The backends are instead responsible for calling the
function to update the values.

For the native backend, it's important that this happens on the correct
thread, so each time either of these states may change, post a idle
callback on the main thread that sets the, at the time of queuing said
callback, up to date state. This means that things on the main thread
will always be able to get a "new enough but not too new" state when
listening on the 'notify::' signals and getting the property value
after.

Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1739>
2021-03-04 17:39:08 +00:00
Jonas Ådahl
26912523fa native/seat-impl: Add helper for queuing main thread idle callbacks
Make the emit main thread signal use it. Will be used for calling code
on the main thread from the input thread.

Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1739>
2021-03-04 17:39:08 +00:00
Jonas Ådahl
adc6537917 remote-desktop: Add backend getter
Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1739>
2021-03-04 17:39:08 +00:00
Florian Müllner
e2a68b5ba1 ci: Update ci-fairy image
Previously the information which commit failed a commit message check
was hidden in parts of the report that don't show up in gitlab's UI.

Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1753>
2021-03-04 11:13:41 +00:00
Jonas Dreßler
4d54c3c556 clutter: Also pick on BUTTON_PRESS events
In an x11 session, we don't receive motion events from X when the
pointer is above a window. Since commit 734a1859 we only do picking on
motion events though, which means when clicking the mouse to focus a
window, we don't repick and might still think the pointer is hovering
above another window or actor, ending up not focussing the window.

Fix this by always repicking on BUTTON_PRESS events. While this is not
necessary in the wayland session, button presses happen rarely compared
to motion events, so it's not a performance regression to do it in
Wayland sessions, too.

Fixes https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/issues/1660

Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1752>
2021-03-03 14:50:25 +01:00
Jonas Dreßler
c6935ad5b7 clutter/text: Avoid relayout on PangoAttributes changes when possible
ClutterText allows setting a custom PangoAttrList, and St uses that to
set the text style it's reading from CSS. One style St enforces using
this mechanism is the text color and setting the text color should
obviously not affect the size of the layout. ClutterText does queue a
relayout in that case though because it unconditionally queues a
relayout when updating the PangoAttrList.

We can avoid this relayout by reusing an optimization ClutterText has:
clutter_text_queue_redraw_or_relayout() will only queue a relayout if
the requested size of the layout changed.

Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1750>
2021-03-02 15:01:03 +00:00
Asier Sarasua Garmendia
54b974b129 Update Basque translation 2021-02-28 18:55:03 +00:00
Ivan Molodetskikh
861d03aac0 x11-display: Use unsetenv if old value was NULL
Gets rid of a CRITICAL if NO_AT_BRIDGE was not set before.

Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1749>
2021-02-27 09:16:49 +00:00
Alexander Mikhaylenko
2a71ca373b clutter: Add API for retrieving gesture unaccelerated deltas
This will be useful for better aligning behavior between scrolling and
swiping for gnome-shell swipe tracker.

Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1353>
2021-02-27 08:52:00 +00:00
Jonas Dreßler
91d03f1c96 display: Reset all grab properties after a grab op
Make sure to reset all the state that was set for an interactive grab op
back to the defaults after a grab op has ended.

Especially important here is setting grab_frame_action back to FALSE,
since this will constrain window-titlebars to the panel. We set this to
TRUE on some grabs, for example when resizing, but not when moving
windows. Since this remained being set to TRUE, it would also constrain
non-grab window movements, like calling MetaWindow.move_frame(), which
is used by gnome-shells OSK. By resetting it back to FALSE after a grab,
the OSK can now always move non-maximized windows to the position it
wants.

Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1736>
2021-02-26 14:53:32 +00:00
Jonas Ådahl
3bbfaa03b3 background-content: Fix pipeline cache size
The cache had the size 9, which was "big enough" in the past, but when
more ways pipelines could be constructed, the size was not enough. The
need to increase the cache size was hard to spot though, since adding
pipeline flag didn't give any hints about the cache being directly tied
to these flag values.

So, when enough flag bits were set when attempting to retrieve and put a
pipeline in the cache, it'd instead overwrite some arbitrary stack
memory, which would sooner or later result in a memory corruption
induced crash. Valgrind could not detect this particular memory
corruption, as it messed up stack memory, not e.g. freed heap memory, so
it instead got confused and thought plain stack values were unreadable.

Fix these two issues by making the cache size the combination of all
pipeline flags + 1, so that we can safely put any flag combination in
the cache.

Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1747>
2021-02-24 15:59:58 +00:00
Philip Withnall
bec456ba0a xwayland: Fix some FD leaks on error paths
If `meta_xwayland_start_xserver()` returned via an error path, some of
the socket FDs were leaked.

Fix that, and add `steal_fd()` calls to make it clearer that FDs passed
to `g_subprocess_launcher_take_fd()` are transferred to it. There were
no bugs with how `GSubprocessLauncher` was being used.

Spotted while working on
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/-/issues/2332.

Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@endlessos.org>
Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1738>
2021-02-24 14:17:07 +00:00
Jonas Ådahl
36352f44f9 onscreen/native: Add ref to dumb buffer when using as scanout buffer
Each next and current scanout buffer has a reference on them making sure
they stay alive. When dumb buffers were used on the secondary GPU state,
this didn't happen, leading to crashes due to unref:ing one time too
many, with backtraces such as

  0) g_type_check_instance_is_fundamentally_a ()
  1) g_object_unref ()
  2) secondary_gpu_release_dumb ()
  3) import_shared_framebuffer ()
  4) update_secondary_gpu_state_post_swap_buffers ()
  5) meta_onscreen_native_swap_buffers_with_damage ()
  6) cogl_onscreen_swap_buffers_with_damage ()
  7) swap_framebuffer ()
  8) clutter_stage_cogl_redraw_view_primary ()
  9) clutter_stage_cogl_redraw_view ()
 10) _clutter_stage_window_redraw_view ()
 11) handle_frame_clock_frame ()

Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1746>
2021-02-24 12:46:56 +00:00
Jonas Ådahl
83e74adb5a onscreen/native: Remove stray whitespace
Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1746>
2021-02-24 12:46:56 +00:00
Fran Dieguez
6c9393acdc Update Galician translation 2021-02-24 00:09:36 +00:00
Jonas Ådahl
bd923035d4 x11-display: Set NO_AT_BRIDGE to 1 while opening the GDK display
gnome-shell has this hack where it sets the environment variable
"NO_AT_BRIDGE" to "1" before calling meta_init() and then unsets it
after meta_init() returns.

This variable being set to "1" will then cause the ATK bridge in
at-spi2-gtk to fail to load, which GTK then ignores. This is on purpose,
since accessibility is supposed to be done done by GNOME Shell via
Clutter, not via GTK.

The problem is that, now, by default, setting "NO_AT_BRIDGE" to
"1" during meta_init() only has the desired effect on an X11 session,
where we always connect to the X11 server on startup (i.e. during
meta_init()). With Xwayland on-demand, we do not attempt to create the
GDK display during meta_init(), thus this hack falls apart.

Since there are no real altenatives to this hack, just move it to
mutter, which have a better idea when GDK displays are created or not.

Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1744>
2021-02-23 18:21:09 +01:00
Olivier Fourdan
2432508db7 core: Account for the globally active input case
Commit afa43154 tried to make sure the focus was properly changed when
calling focus_default_window() by checking the focused window just after
trying to set the focus.

However, the X11 “Inter-Client Communication Conventions Manual” version
2.0 (ICCCM 2 for short) states that some X11 client may want to use a so
called “globally active input” model in which case the client expects
keyboard input and set input focus even when it's not one of its own
window.

To comply with this, when dealing with such clients, mutter will not
change the focus and send a WM_TAKE_FOCUS message instead.

That mechanism will defeat the logic introduced by commit afa43154
because the focused window is not changed in this case. As a result, the
input focus will fallback to the no-focus window.

To avoid this, only check that the focus change occurred for windows
using a synchronous focus model.

v2: Split specific test for "globally active input" model (Florian).
v3: Remove the check for window->unmanaging which is useless (Jonas).

Fixes: afa43154 - "core: Make sure focus_default_window() worked"
Close: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/issues/1620
Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1716>
2021-02-23 11:08:59 +00:00
Olivier Fourdan
6438919a89 window: Add "is_focus_async" API
X11 clients can use different models of input handling, of which some
may not result focus being set synchronously.

For such clients, meta_focus_window() will not change the focus itself
but rely on the client itself to set the input focus on the desired
window.

Add a new MetaWindow API to check when dealing with such a window.

Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1716>
2021-02-23 11:08:59 +00:00
Jonas Ådahl
9de36fed4d virtual-input-device/native: Verify device cleanup in impl_state_free()
We free it in the task function, so it's already NULL when freeing the
state struct. Change the redudant unref to a NULL check warning.

Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1688>
2021-02-23 10:05:32 +00:00
Jonas Ådahl
671bda2509 virtual-input-device/native: Emit added/removed events
Without these devices, things that depend on the existance of input
device classes won't know about the existance of e.g. pointer devices,
if the only pointer device is from a virtual one.

This requires handling situations where e.g. a device doesn't have a
device node thus can't be matched against a udev device.

Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1688>
2021-02-23 10:05:32 +00:00
Jonas Ådahl
5e34ae2154 backend: Only create idle monitors for added physical input devices
The rest of the things we do aren't applicable, e.g. mapping tablet
devices/tools to monitors and hiding cursors.

Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1688>
2021-02-23 10:05:32 +00:00
Jonas Ådahl
e6b70f1a2b seat-impl: Dispatch source also when there are already queued events
Libinput will queue a few initial events when a seat is assigned to the
udev backend; a result of it probing udev adding detected devices. For
us to see these events, we need to dispatch libinput before going idle,
as nothing will show up on the libinput file descriptor until something
else (e.g. keyboard event or mouse movement) wakes us up.

Do this by adding a prepare() function to the libinput GSource, that
checks whether there are any events in the queue already, and return
TRUE if so is the case, causing us to dispatch before going fully idle.

Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1688>
2021-02-23 10:05:32 +00:00
Pascal Nowack
9b5fb1b593 remote-desktop: Clarify the type of keycode for NotifyKeyboardKeycode()
The API for NotifyKeyboardKeycode() does not mention what type of
keycode is expected to be submitted.
So, clarify in the API that the keycode to submit is expected to be an
evdev keycode.

Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1732>
2021-02-23 08:18:05 +00:00
Pascal Nowack
72cfe9b3fd backends/x11: Interpret keycode correctly
Currently, when a remote desktop user submits a keycode, it will be
interpreted differently, when using the x11 session, instead of a
wayland session.
In a wayland session, submitting a keycode will have the expected
result (as if the key was pressed locally).
In a x11 session, this is not the case. Instead of getting the expected
key, some other key will be pressed (or sometimes even none).
The reason for this is that the native backend interprets the keycode
as evdev keycode and the x11 backend interprets the keycode as xkb
keycode.

To ensure that both backends produce the same behaviour when submitting
a keycode, fix the x11 backend to always interpret the keycode as evdev
keycode, instead of a xkb keycode.

Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1732>
2021-02-23 08:18:05 +00:00
Pascal Nowack
ff48f6c26b remote-desktop: Fix typo in API description
For NotifyKeyboardKeycode() the API user submits keycodes instead of
keysyms.

Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1732>
2021-02-23 08:18:05 +00:00
Florian Müllner
c90690c46d Post-release version bump 2021-02-22 15:52:04 +01:00
Florian Müllner
23f45645da Tag release 40.beta
Update NEWS.
2021-02-22 15:44:43 +01:00
Robert Mader
aa6b7ed468 monitor-manager-xrandr: Change g_memdup() to g_memdup2()
This was propably overlooked in 30e1c51b33

Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1512>
2021-02-22 13:52:27 +01:00
Robert Mader
6eeeffdc68 src: Stop using GSlice
It has been inofficially deprecated for years, is known to cause issues
with valgrind and potentially hides memory corruption.
Lets stop using it.

Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1512>
2021-02-22 13:52:27 +01:00
Robert Mader
8b977e9046 clutter: Stop using GSlice
It has been inofficially deprecated for years, is known to cause issues
with valgrind and potentially hides memory corruption.
Lets stop using it.

Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1512>
2021-02-22 13:52:27 +01:00
Robert Mader
df4508e8cf cogl: Stop using GSlice
It has been inofficially deprecated for years, is known to cause issues
with valgrind and potentially hides memory corruption.
Lets stop using it.

Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1512>
2021-02-22 13:51:30 +01:00
Aurimas Černius
ddca606b58 Updated Lithuanian translation 2021-02-21 22:00:25 +02:00
Kukuh Syafaat
5c40e8169e Update Indonesian translation 2021-02-21 13:29:30 +00:00
Jonas Dreßler
9512d58c28 display: Don't add MetaDisplay argument to grab-op-* signals twice
GObject signals pass the emitting GObject as the first argument to
signal handler callbacks. When refactoring the grab-op-begin/end signals
to remove MetaScreen with commit 1d5e37050d,
the "screen" argument was replaced with a "display" argument instead of
being removed completely. This made us call the signal handlers with two
identical MetaDisplay arguments, which is very confusing and actually
wasn't handled in a grab-op-begin handler in gnome-shell.

So fix this by not adding the MetaDisplay as an argument to those
signals, GObject will take care of that for us.

Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1734>
2021-02-19 14:52:22 +01:00
Jonas Dreßler
5527b6e483 background-content: Add support for rounded clipping when drawing
We're going to round the workspace backgrounds in the new overview for
gnome-shell 40.

So far corner-rounding was only possible for StWidgets because the
rounded clipping was done using cairo drawing. We now need rounded
clipping for ClutterActors too because backgrounds are drawn using
ClutterActors (or more specifically a ClutterContent). To implement
that, first a ClutterOffscreenEffect subclass together with a fragment
shader from GSK (see gskSetOutputColor() [1] in the GSK GL renderer
code) was investigated, and while that was generic and worked quite
well, it was extremely slow for the case of drawing wallpapers because
of all the FBOs that had to be allocated.

This is the new, more performant approach: Use the same fragment shader,
but perform the rounded clipping right in MetaBackgroundContent while
we're painting the wallpaper. This has almost no performance impact,
with the downside of not being a generic solution.

To allow for rounded clipping not only at the edges of the wallpaper,
but using any given bounding rectangle, the API exposes not only the
radius, but also a bounding rect.

[1] https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gtk/-/blob/master/gsk/resources/glsl/preamble.fs.glsl

Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1717>
2021-02-18 20:26:42 +00:00
Matej Urbančič
40021c9f00 Update Slovenian translation 2021-02-18 20:18:06 +00:00
Jonas Ådahl
7ddbcd1fd2 cogl/journal: Don't sometimes hold a ref on the framebuffer
d42f1873fc introduced a semi circular
reference between the CoglFramebuffer, and CoglJournal, where
CoglJournal would keep a reference on the CoglFramebuffer when there
were any entries in the journal log.

To avoid risking leaking these objects indefinitely, when freeing
objects without doing anything that triggered a flush, CoglFramebuffer
had a "filter" on cogl_object_unref() calls, which knew
about under what conditions CoglJournal had a reference to it. When it
could detect that there were only the journal itself holding such a
reference, it'd flush the journal, effectively releasing the reference
the journal held, thus freeing itself, as well as the journal.

When CoglFramebuffer was ported to be implemented using GObject instead
of CoglObject, this "filter" was missed, causing not only awkward but
infrequent leaks, but also situations where we'd flush journals when
only the journal itself held the last reference to the framebuffer,
meaning the journal would free the framebuffer, thus itself, in the
middle of flushing, causing memory corruption and crashes.

A way to detect this, by asserting on CoglObject reference count during
flush, is by adding the `g_assert()` as described below, which will
assert instead cause memory corruption.

void
_cogl_journal_flush (CoglJournal *journal
{
   ...
   _cogl_journal_discard (journal);
+  g_assert (journal->_parent.ref_count > 0);
   ...
}

Fix this by making CoglFramebuffer the owner of the journal, which it
already was, and remove any circle referencing that was there before, as
it is not needed given that the CoglFramebuffer pointer is guaranteed to
be valid for the lifetime of CoglJournal as the framebuffer is the owner
of the journal.

However, to not miss flushing before tearing down, which is important as
this flushes painting calls to the driver that is important for e.g.
using the result of those journal entries, flush the journal the first
time cogl_framebuffer_dispose() is called, before doing anything else.

This also adds a test case. Without having broken the circular
reference, the test would fail on g_assert_null (offscreen), as it would
have been "leaked" at this point, but the actual memory corruption would
be a result of the `cogl_texture_get_data()` call, which flushes the
framebuffer, and causes the 'mid-flush' destruction of the journal
described above. Note that the texture keeps track of dependent
framebuffers, but it does not hold any references to them.

Closes: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/issues/1474
Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1735>
2021-02-18 16:59:00 +00:00
Pascal Nowack
7076945488 remote-desktop: Document NotifyPointerAxis() more explicit
Currently, the documentation for NotifyPointerAxis() just mentions that
a smooth scroll event is emitted.
However, this is not entirely correct. For each NotifyPointerAxis(),
mutter emits an emulated discrete scrolling event based on the
submitted accumulated smooth scrolling deltas.
Additionally, it doesn't mention how the motion deltas need to be
interpreted.

So, document the NotifyPointerAxis() notification better by mentioning
the emulation of discrete scroll events, how these discrete scroll
events are calculated and how the motion deltas need to be interpreted.

Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1727>
2021-02-17 21:47:00 +01:00
Pascal Nowack
c77e943ce2 backends/native: Handle triple resolution mouse wheels better
When a remote desktop user emits a virtual smooth scrolling event, a
smooth scroll event, that is not emulated, is emitted and on occasion
a discrete scroll event, that is emulated, is emitted.
As base for the discrete scrolling event, the smooth scrolling steps
are accumulated.
When the accumulated smooth scrolling steps surpass the
DISCRETE_SCROLL_STEP, the discrete scrolling event is emitted.

Currently, mutter uses for DISCRETE_SCROLL_STEP the value 10, which is
a terrible value to work with, especially for high resolution mouse
wheels.
When a triple resolution mouse wheel is used, each scrolling step will
have the value 3 1/3.
Three of such events won't however surpass the DISCRETE_SCROLL_STEP.

To fix this situation, add DBL_EPSILON to the calculation step, when
checking for the discrete scroll event to ensure that 3 smooth scroll
events, with each having the value 3 1/3, emit a discrete scrolling
event.

Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1727>
2021-02-17 21:39:03 +01:00
Pascal Nowack
a5d692582d backends/x11: Emit discrete scroll events for accumulated smooth events
MetaVirtualInputDeviceX11 currently doesn't handle smooth scroll events
at all.
So, if a user of the remote desktop API uses smooth scroll events, then
only the wayland backend handles these events.
The user of the remote desktop API however, might not know which
backend is being used and actually the user should not even have to
care about it.

Actual smooth events cannot be emulated in the X11 events.
What can be done however is accumulating smooth events and then when
the accumulated steps surpass the DISCRETE_SCROLL_STEP value, emit a
discrete scroll event.
So, do exactly that, to make smooth scroll events work when the remote
desktop API is used with the x11 backend.

Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1727>
2021-02-17 21:39:03 +01:00
Jordi Mas
64834aee23 Update Catalan translation 2021-02-17 20:34:21 +01:00
Jonas Dreßler
1922896f07 clutter: Also pick on TOUCH_BEGIN events
With 734a185915 an optimization was
introduced to only pick on events which can actually cause the pointer
to move. In case of touch events, the first event (TOUCH_BEGIN) will
already move the touchpoint though, and we'll send our crossing
CLUTTER_ENTER event to the actor this TOUCH_BEGIN happened on.

So fix this embarrassing bug that caused touch input to break by also
picking to find an event-actor on TOUCH_BEGIN events.

Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1733>
2021-02-16 10:01:22 +01:00
Emin Tufan Çetin
70cfccd9e2 Update Turkish translation 2021-02-15 14:16:19 +00:00
Jonas Dreßler
734a185915 clutter: Only pick on motion or touch update events
Aside from ENTER/LEAVE, there are only two kinds of events that can move
the pointer, motion events and touch update events. Everything else
keeps the pointer at it's current position.

The reason we pick inside _clutter_process_event_details() is that we
want to set the event actor. Now if an event can't move the pointer, it
also can't change the event actor (well, it can subsequently by
triggering changes to the scenegraph, but that's handled elsewhere), so
there's no need to pick a new event actor when we get those events.
Instead, simply reuse the actor that's already associated with the
current input device as the event actor for non MOTION/TOUCH_UPDATE
events.

Events where a device or a touchpoint goes away (like DEVICE_REMOVED or
TOUCH_END/CANCEL) also affect picking, they don't need a repick, but
instead the actor associated with the device/touchpoint needs to be
unassociated. This is ensured by invoking remove_device_for_event() on
those events and will not be affected by this change.

This should improve performance while scrolling quite a bit, since
scroll events come in unthrottled and we now no longer do a repick on
each one of those.

Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1729>
2021-02-15 12:24:49 +00:00
Jonas Dreßler
d5b69d9cc0 clutter: Use event source directly for debug message
No need to assign things to a separate variable there, let's just read
event->any.source directly instead.

Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1729>
2021-02-15 12:24:49 +00:00