They're just typedefs to CoglObject and CoglObjectClass, respectively,
and the latter is unused already. The former is used in a couple of
deprecated headers, which can easily be changed.
Change all CoglHandleObject instances to CoglObject, and drop the types
Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/2355>
There is no need to make CoglJournal a CoglObject, nor any kind of
object for that matter, since it doesn't require refcounting at all.
CoglJournal is entirely private to, and managed by, CoglFramebuffer,
and it only needs to create and destroy it.
Make CoglJournal a free-form struct, and adjust CoglFramebuffer to
call _cogl_journal_free() instead of cogl_object_unref().
Related: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/issues/2087
Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/2355>
DMA buffers might be allocatable, but it doesn't mean the driver doesn't
fail when we try to allocate a buffer with an implicit modifier. Using
the proprietary NVIDIA driver for example, it will fail. Lets catch this
up front and avoid advertising DMA buffer support when we know it won't
work.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/2383>
Previously, we would only check for EXT_swap_buffers_with_damage which
generally will find an implementation. However, some EGL implementations
do not appear to support that naming of the extension, preferring to
only advertise KHR_swap_buffers_with_damage.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/2316>
Returns TRUE if the active renderer backend can allocate DMA buffers.
This is the case hardware accelerated GBM backends, but FALSE for
surfaceless (i.e. no render node) and EGLDevice (legacy NVIDIA paths).
While software based gbm devices can allocate DMA buffers, we don't want
to allocate them for offscreen rendering, as we really only use these
for inter process transfers, and as buffers allocated for scanout
doesn't use the relevant API, making it return FALSE for these solves
that.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1939>
Because both code paths require the existence of `GL_TIMESTAMP[_EXT]`
which is only guaranteed if `ARB_timer_query` (included in GL core 3.3)
is implemented.
We know when that is true because `context->glGenQueries` and
`context->glQueryCounter` are non-NULL. So that is the minimum
requirement for any use of `GL_TIMESTAMP`, even when it is used in
`glGetInteger64v`.
Until now, Raspberry Pi (OpenGL 2.1) would find a working implementation
of `glGetInteger64v` but failed to check whether the driver understands
`GL_TIMESTAMP` (it doesn't).
Fixes: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/issues/2107
Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/2253>
When Cogl gained support for importing pixmaps, I think there was a
misunderstanding that there is a difference in how it works in GLX and
EGL where GLX needs to rebind the pixmap in order to guarantee that
changes are reflected in the texture after it detects damage, whereas
with EGL it doesn’t. The GLX spec makes it pretty clear that it does
need to rebind whereas the EGL spec is a bit harder to follow. As a
fallout from Mesa MR 12869, it seems like the compositor really does
need to rebind the image to comply with the spec. Notably, in
OES_EGL_image_external there is:
"Binding (or re-binding if already bound) an external texture by calling
BindTexture after all modifications are complete guarantees that
sampling done in future draw calls will return values corresponding to
the values in the buffer at or after the time that BindTexture is
called."
So this commit changes the x11_damage_notify handler for EGL to lazily
queue a rebind like GLX does. The code that binds the image while
allocating the texture has been moved into a reusable helper function.
It seems like there is a bit of a layering violation when accessing the
GL driver internals from the EGL winsys code, but I noticed that the GLX
code also includes the driver GL headers and otherwise it seems pretty
tricky to do properly.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/2062>
Because POSIX sh was, with hindsight, not a particularly well-designed
programming language, if we don't 'set -e', then we'll respond to failure
of a setup command such as cd by carrying on regardless.
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@debian.org>
Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/2009>
The assumption here seems to be that it's an overlay onto the
current environment which would make sense; but the implementation in
gnome-desktop-testing currently removes all other environment variables
(see GNOME/gnome-desktop-testing#1). This causes test failure when the
tests are run in Debian's autopkgtest framework, possibly because PATH
is cleared.
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@debian.org>
Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/2009>
Add support for a cogl function to set the damage_region on an onscreen
framebuffer.
The goal of this is to enable using the EGL_KHR_partial_update extension
which can potentially reduce memory bandwidth usage by some GPUs,
particularly on embedded GPUs that operate on a tiling rendering model.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/2023>
These match their alpha counterparts, apart from not setting the
alpha bit. This allows our internal mashinery to more easily
distinguish whether we need a slow alpha-pass during rendering or not.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1810>
These match their alpha counterparts, apart from not setting the
alpha bit. This allows our internal mashinery to more easily
distinguish whether we need a slow alpha-pass during rendering or not.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1810>
Using "framebuffer_discard" in the list refers to an invalid extension.
The extension which introduces glDiscardFramebufferEXT is
"GL_EXT_discard_framebuffer".
With this fix, cogl_gl_framebuffer_fbo_discard_buffers can actually call
glDiscardFramebufferEXT.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1974>
A trace "anchor" is a trace head (CoglTraceHead) that is placed in a
certain scope (e.g. function scope), but then only triggered in another
scope, e.g. a condition.
This makes it possible to have optional trace instrumentation, that is
enabled only given e.g. a debug flag.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1700>
Seems glGetString(GL_RENDERER) in the wild can return NULL, causing
issues with strstr(). Handle this more gracefully by using
g_return_val_if_fail(), that assumes a NULL renderer means software
rendering.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1931>
Add utilities that allow getting the current GPU timestamp and creating
a query which completes upon completion of all operations currently
submitted on a framebuffer. Combined, these two allow measuring how long
it took the GPU to finish rendering something to a framebuffer.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1762>
We need to call eglBindAPI() with GLES before we setup the secondary
GPU blit. We've been lucky not really needing this, as it has been
GLES default, which is what the secondary blit uses, in order to not
depend on the default, or if we want to create the secondary blit
objects after initializing cogl, we must make sure to bind the right API
at the right time.
As we need to bind the GLES API when setting up the secondary blit, we
need to make sure that cogl gets the right API bound when that's done,
so Cogl can continue working. For this, add a "bind_api()" method on the
CoglRenderer object, that will know what API is correct to bind.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1828>
Just like we do on EGL. Two bits are required because
`cogl-clip-stack-gl.c` needs each stencil buffer element to be able to
count from 0 to 2.
This mistake probably went unnoticed because:
* Drivers usually provide more than 1 anyway; and
* Optimizations in `cogl-clip-stack-gl.c` avoid calling the code that
needs to count past 1 in most cases.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1873>
Previously we were using a mask of 0x1 for the lifetime of the stencil.
This was wrong for two reasons:
* The intersection algorithm needs to count up to a maximum 2, so a
mask of 1 would clamp to 1 instead. Then decrementing all pixels
resulted in all pixels being zero even though we want some to be 1.
So the stencil then blocked some color buffer pixels being rendered.
* The lifetime of the mask was too long. By leaving it non-zero at
the end of the function we could accidentally end up modifying the
stencil contents during our later color buffer paints.
This fixes faulty rendering of some actors seen in gnome-shell with
test case: `env COGL_DEBUG=stencilling`
Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1873>
Previously we were using a mask of 0x1 for the lifetime of the stencil.
This was wrong for two reasons:
* The intersection algorithm needs to count up to a maximum 2, so a
mask of 1 would clamp to 1 instead. Then decrementing all pixels
resulted in all pixels being zero even though we want some to be 1.
So the stencil then blocked some color buffer pixels being rendered.
* The lifetime of the mask was too long. By leaving it non-zero at
the end of the function we could accidentally end up modifying the
stencil contents during our later color buffer paints.
This fixes missing rendering of some actors seen in gnome-shell with
test case: `env COGL_DEBUG=stencilling CLUTTER_PAINT=disable-clipped-redraws`
Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1873>
The cogl tests need to run with a display server set, however since we
use TestEnvironment, only the listed env variables will be exposed to
the test and so no DISPLAY will be set when launching it with
gnome-desktop-testing-runner.
As per this, just run the tests using xvfb-run so that we match what's
happening in CI and we ensure that the tests are run in a safe
environment.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1876>
As documented in g_once_init_enter(): "While @location has a volatile qualifier,
this is a historical artifact and the pointer passed to it should not be
volatile.". And effectively this now warns with modern glibc.
Drop the "volatile" qualifier from these static variables as it's expected.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1785>
This concerns only the cases when the presentation timestamp is received
directly from the device (from KMS or from GLX). In the majority of
cases this timestamp is already MONOTONIC. When it isn't, after this
commit, the current value of the MONOTONIC clock is sampled instead.
The alternative is to store the clock id alongside the timestamp, with
possible values of MONOTONIC, REALTIME (from KMS) and GETTIMEOFDAY (from
GLX; this might be the same as REALTIME, I'm not sure), and then
"convert" the timestamp to MONOTONIC when needed. An example of such a
conversion was done in compositor.c (removed in this commit). It would
also be needed for the presentation-time Wayland protocol. However, it
seems that the vast majority of up-to-date systems are using MONOTONIC
anyway, making this effort not justified.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1484>
KMS and GLX device timestamps have microsecond precision, and whenever
we sample the time ourselves it's not the real presentation time anyway,
so nanosecond precision for that case is unnecessary.
The presentation timestamp in ClutterFrameInfo is in microseconds, too,
so this commit makes them have the same precision.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1484>
A flag indicating whether the presentation timestamp was provided by the
display hardware (rather than sampled in user space).
It will be used for the presentation-time Wayland protocol.
This is definitely the case for page_flip_handler(), and I'm assuming
this is also the case for the two instances in the GLX code.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1484>
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>
It's currently only handled by a surface backend framebuffer (assuming
the right GLX extensions are available). While it's theoretically
possible to do the same with the offcreen by having multiple textures,
it's not supported, so leave the FBO variant with a single warning if we
end up there.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1514>
The object was still pretending to be CoglFramebuffer itself, by using
naming and calling conventions making it seem like that. Fix that by
passing around the driver instead of the framebuffer.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1514>
Mutter needs to fetch the X11 Window ID from the onscreen and did that
by using an X11 specific API on the CoglOnscreen, where the X11 type was
"expanded" (Window -> uint32_t). Change this by introducing an interface
called CoglX11Onscreen, implemented by both the Xlib and GLX onscreen
implementations, that keeps the right type (Window), while avoiding X11
specific API for CoglOnscreen.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1514>
Mutter didn't use the APIs for resizeability of CoglOnscreens but
managed the size itself. For the native backend we don't ever resize
onscreens. Thus, remove this unused functionality.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1514>
The framebuffer driver was lazilly initialized on demand in some cases
(onscreen), and up front other (offscreen). Replace this with a more
predictable up front initialization, done at framebuffer allocation.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1514>
The CoglGLFramebuffer (not CoglGlFramebuffer) is a private struct for
keeping track of the framebuffer object. To avoid confusing with
CoglGlFramebuffer, rename it CoglGlFbo.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1514>
This way we can have separate types per modes of operation (e.g. if it's
backed by an EGLSurface or single texture), instead of being dependent
on a certain type (onscreen vs offscreen).
Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1514>
Instead of calling "init_onscreen()" on two different separate vtables
from the allocate() funtion, just have the CoglOnscreen sub types
themself implement allocate() and initialize in there.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1514>
Thins means that e.g. MetaOnscreenNative now inherits CoglOnscreenEgl,
which inherits CoglOnscreen which inherits CoglFramebuffer, all being
the same GObject instance.
This makes it necessary to the one creating the onscreen to know what it
wants to create. For the X11 backend, the type of renderer (Xlib EGL or
GLX) determines the type, and for the native backend, it's currently
always MetaOnscreenNative.
The "winsys" vfunc entries related to onscreens hasn't been moved yet,
that will come later.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1514>
The mutter naming convention for types and their instance variables is:
Type name:
[Namespace][BaseName][SubType]
Instance name:
[base_name]_[sub_type]
This means that e.g. CoglOnscreenGLX is renamed CoglOnscreenGlx, and
glx_onscreen is renamed onscreen_glx. This is in preparation for
GObjectification.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1514>
The GLX winsys code had split up the GLX onscreen implementation into an
Xlib part (with a struct name confusingly enough identical to that of
the onscreen in the actual Xlib winsys). To remove some confusion,
combine the two.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1514>
This makes it possible to post a symbolic page flip and frame callback,
meant to be used by immediate symbolic page flip reply when emulating
cursor plane changes using legacy drmMode* functions.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1488>
We will soon need to use CoglOnscreen frame events communicate cursor
plane changes; this means we need to have a way to queue them without
going through any of the current APIs that can do so, i.e. the swap
buffer functions and direct scanout.
Add a function that just adds a frame info to the queue. The one who
adds it is responsible for emitting it too.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1488>
Don't mode set each CRTC in separate KMS updates, as reconfiguring one
CRTC might cause other CRTCs to be implicitly reset thus as well,
causing KMS return EBUSY if using atomic modesetting.
Prepare for this by compositing each CRTC first including adding steps
to the KMS update, but wait until all views has rendered at least once
before posting the initial update. After this each CRTC is posted
separately.
Using EGLStreams instead of normal page flipping seems to fail when
doing this though, so handle that the old way for the EGLStream case,
i.e. eglSwapBuffers() -> mode set with dumb buffer -> eglStream
"acquire" (resulting in page flip under the hood).
For this we also introduce a new error code so that we don't use client
buffers when doing mode sets, which could accidentally configure the
CRTC in a way that is incompatible with the primary plane buffers.
Do the same also when we're in power save mode, to only have one special
case path for this scenario in the regular swap-buffer path.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1488>
This argument is intended to be used by clutter to be able to
communicate with the onscreen backend, that happens to be the native
backend. It will be used to pass a ClutterFrame pointer, where the
result of page flips, mode sets etc can be communicated whenever it is
available.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1488>
Because the framebuffer itself might be backed by a texture, which might
have mipmapping enabled. If so then rendering to the framebuffer will make
those mipmaps out of date.
Technically we are flagging the framebuffer's mipmaps as dirty *before*
they are, because the journal hasn't been flushed yet. But we need to do
it early because ideally the next flush will both write the offscreen
framebuffer contents and then read them for use in rendering to an onscreen
framebuffer. And the `mipmaps_dirty` flag needs to be set before the read,
so therefore we need to do it before the next journal flush.
Fixes: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/-/issues/3146
where the offscreen framebuffer in question is meta-background's
`monitor->fbo`.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1664>
If texture allocation failed for a sliced 2D texture, the alloc()
function would free the slices immediately, but not clear the pointer to
the slices array. When the code attempting to allocate the texture then
freed the texture object, the cleanup functions tried to free the slices
array again, since it wasn't NULL.
Fix this by clearing the slices array after freeing it.
Closes: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/issues/1580
Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1648>
This allows profilers to trace the callers of whatever is spending the
most time on the GPU, and to measure render times more accurately.
Previously such information was hidden as it completed in the
background (asynchronously) after we call swap buffers.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1327>
The "paint" signal of ClutterActor is deprecated and will be removed. We
have a good replacement to get notified about stage paints nowadays,
that is "after-paint" on ClutterStage, so switch to that signal where it
makes sense.
I didn't bother to update the few tests (namely Clutters
conform/texture-fbo.c, conform/text-cache.c,
interactive/test-cogl-multitexture.c and Cogls
conform/test-multitexture.c, conform/test-texture-mipmaps.c) where it's
harder to replace the signal since we don't build those anyway.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1522
Instead of our own implementation that upscales, then downscales back,
use graphene_matrix_inverse() directly. This is possible after switching
to a z-near value that doesn't have problems with float precision.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1489
A first step towards abandoning the CoglObject type system: convert
CoglFramebuffer, CoglOffscreen and CoglOnscreen into GObjects.
CoglFramebuffer is turned into an abstract GObject, while the two others
are currently final. The "winsys" and "platform" are still sprinkled
'void *' in the the non-abstract type instances however.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1496
The first argument is the framebuffer operated on, so in order to stay
consistest, rename 'src' to 'framebuffer'. The second is the
destination. The destination is commonly referred to as 'dst' elsewhere,
so rename 'dest' to 'dst'.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1496
This one is a bit tricky. The tl;dr; is that switching from right-hand
multiplication to left-hand multiplication required applying the stack
from left to root. This actually allowed simplifying the code a bit,
since CoglMatrixEntry only stores a pointer to its parent, and that's
all we need to know for left-hand multiplication.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1439
CoglMatrix already is a typedef to graphene_matrix_t. This commit
simply drops the CoglMatrix type, and align parameters. There is
no functional change here, it's simply a find-and-replace commit.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1439
Ideally, we would use Graphene to do that, however as of now Graphene
lacks these APIs so we still need these helpers. Since we're preparing
to get rid of CoglMatrix, move them to a separate file, and rename them
with the 'cogl_graphene' prefix.
Since I'm already touching the world with this change, I'm also renaming
cogl_matrix_transform_point() to cogl_graphene_matrix_project_point(),
as per XXX comment, to make it consistent with the transform/projection
semantics in place.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1439
Given that CoglMatrix is simply a typedef to graphene_matrix_t, we can
remove all the GType machinery and reuse Graphene's.
Also remove the clutter-cogl helper, and cogl_matrix_to_graphene_matrix()
which is now unused.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1439
After the previous commit, the only field in the CoglMatrix structure is
a graphene_matrix_t. That means that CoglMatrix is effectively a graphene
matrix now, and the CoglMatrix struct isn't that much useful anymore.
Remove the CoglMatrix structure and make the CoglMatrix type a typedef to
graphene_matrix_t.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1439
Remove the cached inverse, and dirty flags, and typedef CoglMatrix to
graphene_matrix_t itself. I preverved the type for this commit to help
reducing the commit size, next commits will remove the CoglMatrix type.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1439
CoglMatrix doesn't have a 1:1 mapping of graphene functions, and
sometimes it's just not worth adding wrappers over it. It is easier
to expose the internal graphene_matrix_t and let callers use it
directly.
Add new cogl_matrix_get_graphene_matrix() helper function, and
simplify Clutter's matrix progress function.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1439
Instead of listing all matrix cells as floats, and the inverse
as a 16-length float array, use graphene_matrix_t in the structure
itself.
With this commit, all from/to CoglMatrix conversions are gone. It
is also not possible to initialize a CoglMatrix using the macro
anymore.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1439
Rename cogl_matrix_get_array() to cogl_matrix_to_float(), and
make it copy the floats to an out argument instead of returning
a pointer to the casted CoglMatrix struct.
The naming change is specifically made to match graphene's,
and ease the transition.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1439
Internally, a graphene_matrix_t representing the same transform that
of a CoglMatrix is the same matrix but transposed, so in order to get
the same element given a column and row for a matrix as if it would
be located in Cogl, it is necessary to swap the row and column when
retrieving it from the graphene matrix.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1439
Turns out inverting a matrix was the largest chunk of the CoglMatrix
code. By switching to Graphene, a lot of it can go away. The inverse
is still cached in the CoglMatrix struct itself, to preserve the
optimization.
However, switching to graphene_matrix_t to calculate the inverse has
a challenge: float precision. We had to work around it here, and it
needs an explanation.
The way to detect whether a matrix is invertible or not (i.e.
whether it's not a "singular" matrix, or not) is by checking
if the determinant equals 0. So far, so good.
Both graphene_matrix_t and CoglMatrix use single-precision
floats to store their 4x4 matrices. Graphene uses vectorized
operations to optimize determinant calculation, while Cogl
tries to keep track of the matrix type and has special-purpose
determinant functions for different matrix types (the most
common one being a 3D matrix).
Cogl, however, has a fundamentally flawed check for whether
the matrix is invertible or not. Have a look:
```
float det;
…
if (det*det < 1e-25)
return FALSE;
```
Notice that 1e-25 is *way* smaller than FLT_EPSILON. This
check is fundamentally flawed.
"In practice, what does it break?", the reader might ask.
Well, in this case, the answer is opposite of that: Cogl
inverts matrices that should not be invertible. Let's see
an example: the model-view-projection of a 4K monitor. It
looks like this:
```
| +0,002693 +0,000000 +0,000000 +0,000000 |
| +0,000000 -0,002693 +0,000000 +0,000000 |
| +0,000000 +0,000000 +0,002693 +0,000000 |
| -5,169809 +2,908017 -5,036834 +1,000000 |
```
The determinant of this matrix is -0.000000019530306557.
It evidently is smaller than FLT_EPSILON. In this situation,
Cogl would happily calculate the inverse matrix, whereas
Graphene (correctly) bails out and thinks it's a singular
matrix.
This commit works around that by exploiting the maths around
it. The basis of it is:
inverse(scalar * M) = (1/scalar) * M'
which can be extrapolated to:
inverse(M) = scalar * inverse(scalar * M) = M'
In other words, scaling the to-be-inversed matrix, then
scaling the inverse matrix by the same factor, gives us
the desired inverse. In this commit, the scale is calculated
as 1 / (smallest value in the diagonal).
I'm sorry for everyone that has to read through this :(
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1439
Next commits, and this patchset in general, will make this patchset
obsolete, since it'll only test graphene types against each other.
If at all useful, the Euler test should be moved to graphene.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1439
Use dot products to simplify calculations. Because the 'w' column of
the matrix is always summed, use 1.f in the 'w' component of the point
vector.
Because CoglMatrix is column-major and graphene_matrix_t is row-major,
it is necessary to transpose the matrix before retrieving the rows.
When we switch CoglMatrix to be row-major, this transposition will
go away.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1439
This is pretty similar to the other conversions, except we need to
store the matrix flags before operating on it, and update it using
this old value after. That's because cogl_matrix_init_from_array()
marks the matrix as entirely dirty, and we don't want that.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1439
At this point, we are still only changing CoglMatrix APIs internally, and
it should still produce the same output as before.
To achieve this, using graphens matrix implementation, we need to exploit
some knowledge about conventions used in Cogl and graphene respectively.
In Cogl, transformation matrices are equivalent to those of affine
transformation matrices. The convention used by graphene, however, is to
operate on matrices that are transposed compared to their affine
counterparts.
So for example, let's say we want to multiply the affine matrices A and B,
to get C.
A × B = C
The first step is to convert A and B to graphene matrices. We do this by
importing the floating point array, importing it directly using graphene.
Cogl exports its matrix to a column major floating point array. When we
import this in graphene, being row major, we end up with the same matrix,
only transposed.
Cogl Graphene
A <===> Aᵀ
B <===> Bᵀ
We then multiply these imported matrices in reverse
Bᵀ × Aᵀ
which in turn, due to ABᵀ = BᵀAᵀ, gives us
Bᵀ × Aᵀ = (A × B)ᵀ
Our original goal was to find C, thus we know that
A × B = C
That means we can shuffle things around a bit.
A × B = C
Bᵀ × Aᵀ = (A × B)ᵀ
Bᵀ × Aᵀ = Cᵀ
With the same conversion as done when going from Cogl to graphene, only
the other way around, we still end up effectively transposing the matrix
during the conversion.
Graphene Cogl
Cᵀ <===> C
Thus when converting Cᵀ to Cogl, we in fact end up with C.
(Explanation authored by Jonas Ådahl)
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1439
Graphene provides skewing as part of graphene_matrix_t API, and it'll
be easier for the transition to just expose similar API surfaces.
Move the matrix skew methods to CoglMatrix.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1439
Writing tests' output to a log file makes them difficult to debug when
the test might be running on an autobuilder or CI system where only
stdout/stderr are recorded. This is particularly troublesome if a
failure is only reproducible on a particular autobuilder.
Recent Automake versions have the convention that detailed output from
failing tests is written to stdout/stderr, not just to log files, when
the VERBOSE environment variable is set; borrow that convention as a
trigger for producing detailed test output.
This was originally cogl!14, but applies equally to mutter's fork of cogl.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1273
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@debian.org>
This resolves a couple of FIXMEs. The FIXME comments were right in
stating that not *all* journals needed flushing, only the one we
are trying to put on screen needs flushing.
However we can't eliminate all flushes because the winsys swap calls
that follow go directly into OpenGL which knows nothing about cogl
journalling. So the journal *must* be flushed before the swap, to give
OpenGL the correct state.
P.S. If this turns out to cause any bugs then the next best answer is
to just remove the FIXME comments. Because flushing is still the right
thing to do.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1362
Even when a direct client buffer has a compatible format, stride and
modifier for direct scanout, drmModePageFlip() may still fail sometimes.
From testing, it has been observed that it may seemingly randomly fail
with ENOSPC, where all subsequent attempts later on the same CRTC
failing with EBUSY.
Handle this by falling back to flipping after having composited a full
frame again.
Closes: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/issues/1410
When the CoglRenderer didn't set the DMA buffer constructor vfunc, we
return NULL. What we didn't do was set the error, meaning the caller
would crash if it tried to look up why DMA buffer construction failed.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1430
This will be used when screencasting monitors so that if
there's scanout in place, it'll still be possible to blit
it to a PipeWire-owned framebuffer, and stream it.
Add a new 'blit_to_framebuffer' vfunc to CoglScanout, and
implement it in MetaDrmBufferGbm.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1421
In certain situations it's desirable to keep pipelines around for
the whole lifetime of the session. In order to not leak them and
properly clean them up on shutdown, introduce a new mechanism to
create named pipelines that are bound to their correstponding
context and may be used across file boundries.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1372
In order to support the DRM formats DRM_FORMAT_ABGR16161616F and
friends, as well as the wl_shm formats WL_SHM_FORMAT_ABGR16161616F and
friends, cogl needs to have knowledge about said formats too.
We don't have a software implementation of the half point data types
however, so the pack/unpack methods remain unimplemented. We don't need
them for now, so it's not crucial that we add them.
For the GLES2 driver, currently only two formats are supported, and
since we don't currently have pack/unpack implementations, the other
formats will for now remain unsupported, until we have a half float
implementation.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/804
In the case of indirect rendering like the first frame to use mutter's
background wallpaper:
Texture_A -> FBO_B (Texture_B) -> FBO_C (screen)
we would be trying to render the contents of both FBO_B and FBO_C in
the same flush, before the contents of Texture_A had made it to FBO_B.
So when FBO_C wants to use mipmaps of Texture_B they didn't exist yet
and appeared all black. And the blackness would remain for subsequent
frames as cogl has now decided the mipmaps of FBO_B are no longer
"dirty" and don't need refreshing:
FBO_B (Texture_B) (mipmaps_dirty==FALSE but black) -> FBO_C (screen)
We must flush FBO_B before referencing Texture_B for use in rendering
FBO_C. This only happens when Texture_A changes (e.g. when the user
changes their background wallpaper) so there's no ongoing performance
penalty from this flush.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1347
The native backend had a plain counter, and the X11 backend used the
CoglOnscreen of the screen; change it into a plain counter in
ClutterStageCogl. This also moves the global frame count setting to the
frame info constuctor.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1285
We currently have mutter set a global frame counter on the frame info in
the native backend, but in order to do this from clutter, change the
frame info construction from being implicitly done so when swapping
buffers to having the caller create the frame info and passing that to
the swap buffers call.
While this commit doesn't introduce any other changes than the API, the
intention is later to have the caller be able to pass it's own state
(e.g. the global frame count) along with the frame info.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1285
The property is deprecated and the current implementation simply
redirects it to ClutterActor::background-color, so remove it.
Also update the tests to set the background color directly.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1332
_cogl_shader_set_source_with_boilerplate and _cogl_shader_compile_real
have enough GL assumptions that it makes sense to push them into the
backend. Taken together their only callers are under driver/gl, so.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1194
This had been an entirely-too-GL-aware collection of renderer queries,
mostly to work around driver bugs and handle software drivers
intelligently. The driver workarounds have been removed (fix your
driver, and if you can't because it's closed-source, fix that first),
and we now delegate the am-i-software-or-not logic to the backend, so
this can all go
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1194
We delegate the answer through CoglDriverVtable::is_hardware_accelerated
since this is properly a property of the renderer, and not something the
cogl core should know about. The answer given for the nop driver is
admittedly arbitrary, yes it's infinitely fast but no there's not any
"hardware" making it so.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1194
If a test is not expected to succeed, then running it could be considered
to be a waste of resources, particularly if the failure might manifest
as an indefinite hang (see cogl!11), or if the test is likely to dump core
and trigger "expensive" crash-reporting mechanisms like systemd-coredump,
corekeeper, abrt or apport.
Skip the tests that are expected to fail. They can still be requested via
an environment variable, which can be set after fixing a bug to check which
tests are now passing.
Originally cogl!15, adapted for mutter's fork of cogl to use gboolean
instead of CoglBool.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1272
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@debian.org>
When r is 128 or more, running tests compiled with the undefined behaviour
sanitizer (ubsan) reports:
test-utils.c:312:45: runtime error: left shift of 128 by 24 places cannot be represented in type 'int'
which indeed it cannot. Force the type to be unsigned 32-bit so that we
get defined behaviour.
Similarly, in test-atlas-migration, the left-shifted guint8 is promoted
to int, which again does not have enough non-sign bits available to
left-shift a value >= 128 by 24 bits. Again, force the shift to be done
in unsigned 32-bit space.
This was originally cogl!22, but applies equally to mutter's fork of cogl.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1271
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@debian.org>
According to the cogl_bitmap_new_for_data documentation, the data is not
copied, so the application must keep the buffer alive for the lifetime
of the CoglBitmap. Freeing it too early led to a use-after-free in the
cogl unit tests. With that fixed, the test passes, so remove the known
failure annotation.
This AddressSanitizer trace is from the original cogl, but the bug and
fix apply equally to mutter's fork of cogl:
==6223==ERROR: AddressSanitizer: heap-use-after-free on address 0x62100001a500 at pc 0x7f3e2d4e7f4e bp 0x7ffcd9c41f30 sp 0x7ffcd9c416e0
READ of size 4096 at 0x62100001a500 thread T0
#0 0x7f3e2d4e7f4d (/usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libasan.so.5+0x96f4d)
#1 0x7f3e260c7f6b in util_copy_box ../src/gallium/auxiliary/util/u_surface.c:131
#2 0x7f3e268c6c10 in u_default_texture_subdata ../src/gallium/auxiliary/util/u_transfer.c:67
#3 0x7f3e26486459 in st_TexSubImage ../src/mesa/state_tracker/st_cb_texture.c:1480
#4 0x7f3e26487029 in st_TexImage ../src/mesa/state_tracker/st_cb_texture.c:1709
#5 0x7f3e26487029 in st_TexImage ../src/mesa/state_tracker/st_cb_texture.c:1691
#6 0x7f3e2644bdba in teximage ../src/mesa/main/teximage.c:3105
#7 0x7f3e2644bdba in teximage_err ../src/mesa/main/teximage.c:3132
#8 0x7f3e2644d84f in _mesa_TexImage2D ../src/mesa/main/teximage.c:3170
#9 0x7f3e2cd1f7df in _cogl_texture_driver_upload_to_gl driver/gl/gl/cogl-texture-driver-gl.c:347
#10 0x7f3e2ccd441b in allocate_from_bitmap driver/gl/cogl-texture-2d-gl.c:255
#11 0x7f3e2ccd441b in _cogl_texture_2d_gl_allocate driver/gl/cogl-texture-2d-gl.c:462
#12 0x7f3e2ce3a6c0 in cogl_texture_allocate cogl/cogl-texture.c:1398
#13 0x7f3e2ce3e116 in _cogl_texture_pre_paint cogl/cogl-texture.c:359
#14 0x7f3e2cdee177 in _cogl_pipeline_layer_pre_paint cogl/cogl-pipeline-layer.c:864
#15 0x7f3e2cd574af in _cogl_rectangles_validate_layer_cb cogl/cogl-primitives.c:542
#16 0x7f3e2cdd742f in cogl_pipeline_foreach_layer cogl/cogl-pipeline.c:735
#17 0x7f3e2cd5c8b0 in _cogl_framebuffer_draw_multitextured_rectangles cogl/cogl-primitives.c:658
#18 0x7f3e2cd60152 in cogl_rectangle cogl/cogl-primitives.c:858
#19 0x5570a71ed6a0 in check_texture tests/conform/test-premult.c:103
#20 0x5570a71ed946 in test_premult tests/conform/test-premult.c:159
#21 0x5570a71df0d6 in main tests/conform/test-conform-main.c:58
#22 0x7f3e2bcd809a in __libc_start_main ../csu/libc-start.c:308
#23 0x5570a71e0869 in _start (/home/smcv/src/debian/cogl/tests/conform/.libs/test-conformance+0x33869)
0x62100001a500 is located 0 bytes inside of 4096-byte region [0x62100001a500,0x62100001b500)
freed by thread T0 here:
#0 0x7f3e2d5581d7 in __interceptor_free (/usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libasan.so.5+0x1071d7)
#1 0x5570a71ed58b in make_texture tests/conform/test-premult.c:69
previously allocated by thread T0 here:
#0 0x7f3e2d558588 in malloc (/usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libasan.so.5+0x107588)
#1 0x7f3e2d384500 in g_malloc ../../../glib/gmem.c:99
This was originally cogl!12.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1274
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@debian.org>
Make it possible to cause the next frame to scan out directly from the
passed CoglScannout. This makes it possible to completely bypass
compositing for the following frame.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/798
Instead of always swapping buffers and flipping the back buffer, make it
possible to scan out a provided buffer directly without swapping any EGL
buffers.
A buffer is passed as an object implementing the empty CoglScanout
interface. It is only possible to do this in the native backend; and the
interface is implemented by MetaDrmBufferGbm. When directly scanned out,
instead of calling gbm_surface_lock_front_buffer() to get the gbm_bo and
fbid, get it directly from the MetaDrmBufferGbm, and use that to create
the page flip KMS update.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/798
It isn't immediately obvious that this is impossible, because there's some
"action at a distance" going on with framebuffers that have their size
set lazily, after their textures get allocated; so let's make this a
critical warning rather than crashing.
In particular, this works around a crash when gnome-shell tries to blur a
background that hasn't yet had any space allocated for it - which it seems
is really an actor layout bug, but more robustness seems good to have.
Workaround for <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/-/issues/2538>.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1172
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@debian.org>
A texture with no pixels isn't a useful thing to have, and breaks
assumptions elsewhere. For example, CoglFramebuffer assumes that after
a texture has been allocated, it will have width and height both greater
than 0.
In particular, this works around a crash when gnome-shell tries to blur a
background that hasn't yet had any space allocated for it - which it seems
is really an actor layout bug, but more robustness seems good to have.
Workaround for <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/-/issues/2538>.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1172
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@debian.org>
cogl_object_[get|set]_value_object() are annotated as [get|set]-value-func
for objects and primitives, so they must be visible for any derived types
to be usable from introspection.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/issues/1146
In commit d846fabda we moved to using the override color alpha, however
it was missed that the actor opacity is transferred to the PangoRenderer
through the default color alpha, and the reason it was used there.
We actually want to factor in both alpha values, in order to respect
both foreground color alpha and actor opacity. This is done on the
unpremultiplied color, so we just need to change the alpha value.
Fixes effects on text actors that involve actor opacity.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1158
pango_renderer_get_alpha() returns 0 to indicate that the alpha value
should be inherited from the environment, but we are passing it on
(and therefore making the text fully translucent).
Instead, make the text fully opaque as expected.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1156
Cogl shares some GL functions between the GLES and the big
GL drivers. Namely, it shares _cogl_driver_gl_context_init
and _cogl_driver_gl_context_deinit between these two drivers.
The plot twist is: even though these functions are shared and
their prototypes are in cogl-util-gl-private.h, they're actually
implemented inside cogl-driver-gl.c, which is strictly only
about the big GL driver.
This is problematic when building Mutter on ARM v7, where we
need to disable OpenGL, but keep GLES enabled.
Fix this by moving the shared GL functions to a shared GL file.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1151
Just like libmutter-clutter, and libmutter, mark exported symbols with
an COGL_EXPORT macro. This removes the .map and .map.in files previously
used, containing a list of semi private symbols. This symbol was out of
date, i.e. pointed to non-existing symbols, and was also replaced with
COGL_EXPORT macros.
unit_test_* symbols are exported by the help of the unit test defining
macro. test_* symbols are no longer supported as it proved unnecessary.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/1059
This is so that cogl-trace.h can start using things from cogl-macros.h,
and so that it doesn't leak cogl-config.h into the world, while exposing
it to e.g. gnome-shell so that it can make use of it as well. There is
no practical reason why we shouldn't just include cogl-trace.h via
cogl.h as we do with everything else.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/1059
We need the stencil buffer to consist of binary values of 0 and 1
because we're doing additions and subtractions on the buffer, so even
though this is the default, explicitely set the stencil mask to 0x1.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/1096
When using a region clip and something has a rectangle clip pushed, a
special drawing method for ClutterTexts (emit_vertex_buffer_geometry()
in cogl-pango-display-list.c) starts to fail and clipping issues with
long texts (because emit_vertex_buffer_geometry() is only used for texts
longer than 25 characters) start to appear. This specifically happened
in Looking Glass, where the StViewport of the ScrollView sets a
rectangle clips and the texts are usually longer than 25 characters.
This is caused by the changing of the perspective and modelview matrix
when drawing to the stencil buffer and started happening when
region-clipping was introduced with commit 8598b654. Even though the
changing of the matrices was done before that, too, the issue probably
didn't happen because `rect->can_be_scissor` was TRUE and no stencil
buffer clipping was used at all.
To fix this, temporarily save the old matrices, then set the new ones
and restore the old ones when we're done drawing to the stencil buffer.
Fixes https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/issues/2246https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/1096
This is a winsys-specific API that allows exporting a DMA buffer fd.
The CoglDmaBufHandle structure allows passing the ownership of the
DMA buffer to whoever is using it, so the winsys doesn't need to
manually track it.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/1086
In future patches, we'll create additional CoglFramebuffers that
will be shared via DMA-Buf with PipeWire. When recording frames,
we'll blit the current onscreen framebuffer into the shared one.
However, that presents a problem: cogl_framebuffer_blit() mimics
glBlitFramebuffer() semantics, and doesn't do an implicit flush
of the GPU command stream. As a consequence, clients may receive
unblitted or incomplete framebuffers.
We could use cogl_framebuffer_finish() to ensure the commands were
submitted to the GPU, but it is too harsh -- it blocks the CPU
completely until the commands are finished!
Add cogl_framebuffer_flush(), which ensures the command stream is
submitted to the GPU without blocking the CPU. Even though we don't
use the framebuffer specifically, it may be useful in the future
for e.g. a potential Vulkan backend to have access to the framebuffer.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/1086