Since the Great Rework of ClutterUnits, functions have been using
'units' not 'unit' in their name. clutter_value_get_unit() is a left
over from a dark age, its declaration and documentation have been
updated but not the symbol itself.
Instead of having an assertion failure with a message of dubious
usefulness, we should probably use a more verbose warning explaining
what is the problem and what might be the cause.
The user-initiated resize is conflicting with the allocated size. This
happens because we change the size of the stage's X Window behind the
back of the size allocation machinery.
Instead, we should change the size of the actor whenever we receive a
ConfigureNotify event to reflect the new size of the actor.
We force the redraw before mapping, in the hope that when a composited
window manager maps the window it will have its contents ready; that is
not going to work: the solution for this problem requires the implementation
of a protocol for compositors, and not a hack.
Moreover, painting before mapping will cause a paint with the wrong
GL viewport size, which is the wrong thing to do on GLX.
The chapter on how to subclass ClutterActor inside the API reference for
Clutter is still using ClutterUnit and referencing to concepts that have
been changed since the document was written.
When not building a debug build the compiler was warning about empty
else clauses with no braces due to code like:
if (blah)
do_foo();
else
COGL_NOTE (DRAW, "a-wibble");
This simply ensures that even for non debug builds COGL_NOTE will expand to
a single statement.
glVertexPointer expects positions with 2, 3 or 4 components, glColorPointer
expects colors with 3 or 4 components and glNormalPointer expects normals
with three components so when adding vertex buffer atributes with the names
"gl_Vertex", "gl_Color" or "gl_Normal" we assert these constraints and print
an explanation to the developer if not met.
This also fixes the previosly incorrect constraint that gl_Normal attributes
must have n_components == 1; thanks to Cat Sidhe for reporting this:
Bug: http://bugzilla.openedhand.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1819
Now if you export CLUTTER_DEBUG=dump-pick-buffers clutter will write out a
png, e.g. pick-buffer-00000.png, each time _clutter_to_pick() is called.
It's a rather crude way to debug the picking (realtime visualization in a
second stage would probably be nicer) but it we've used this approach
successfully numerous times when debugging Clutter picking issues so it
makes sense to have a debug option for it.
It looks like the intention was to duplicate an XVisualInfo in such a way
that the pointer could be returned and then later freed using XFree. But
Xalloc isn't an Xlib counterpart to XFree; Xlib doesn't provide a general
purpose malloc wrapper afik. By shuffling things about a bit, it was
possible to avoid the need for this hack.
By default, float * is considered as an out argument by gobject
introspection which is wrong for quite a few Cogl symbols. Start adding
annotations to fix that for the ones in the "Primitives" gtk-doc
section.
In the default implementation of container::destroy_child_meta Set child
meta qdata to NULL on the child and not the container, since the child
is the object that owns the data.
The lifetime of the journal VBO is entirely within the scope of the
cogl_journal_flush function so there is no need to store it globally
in the Cogl context. Instead, upload_vertices_to_vbo just returns the
new VBO. cogl_journal_flush stores this in a local variable and
destroys it before returning.
This also fixes an assertion when using the GLES backend which was
caused by nothing initialising the journal_vbo variable.
I just wasted a silly amount time trying to bisect an apparently broken
cogl-test-multitexture until I realized it was just silently failing to load
any textures.
If the system clock rolls back between two frames then we need
to account for the change, to avoid stopping the timeline.
The best option, since a roll back can be any arbitrary amount
of milliseconds, is to skip a frame.
Fixes bug:
http://bugzilla.moblin.org/show_bug.cgi?id=3839
The framebuffer_object spec isn't clear in defining whether attaching a
texture as a renderbuffer with mipmap filtering enabled while the mipmaps
have not been uploaded should result in an incomplete framebuffer object.
(different drivers make different decisions)
To avoid an error with drivers that do consider this a problem we explicitly
set non mipmapped filters before calling glCheckFramebufferStatusEXT. The
filters will later be reset when the texture is actually used for rendering
according to the filters set on the corresponding CoglMaterial.
This unit verifies that an Actor class will invoke the get_preferred_*
virtual functions unless the caching is in effect; it also verifies
that the cached values are correctly evicted.
The size requisition and allocation mechanisms should be thoroughly
tested to avoid unwanted regressions.
For starters, we can test the explicit size setting and the side
effects of calling clutter_actor_set_size().
Since an actor can only be parented to one container we don't need
the extra complications of maintaining a list of ChildMeta objects
attached to an actor in the default implementation of the Container
interface.
ClutterBehaviourPath has been changed and ClutterBehaviourBspline has
been removed; now we use ClutterPath everywhere we need to describe a
path. This warrants a chapter in the migration guide.
Instead of using ClutterActor for the base class of the Stage
implementation we should extend the StageWindow interface with
the required bits (geometry, realization) and use a simple object
class.
This require a wee bit of changes across Backend, Stage and
StageWindow, even though it's mostly re-shuffling.
First of all, StageWindow should get new virtual functions:
* geometry:
- resize()
- get_geometry()
* realization
- realize()
- unrealize()
This covers all the bits that we use from ClutterActor currently
inside the stage implementations.
The ClutterBackend::create_stage() virtual function should create
a StageWindow, and not an Actor (it should always have been; the
fact that it returned an Actor was a leak of the black magic going
on underneath). Since we never guaranteed ABI compatibility for
the Backend class, this is not a problem.
Internally to ClutterStage we can finally drop the shenanigans of
setting/unsetting actor flags on the implementation: if the realization
succeeds, for instance, we set the REALIZED flag on the Stage and
we're done.
As an initial proof of concept, the X11 and GLX stage implementations
have been ported to the New World Order(tm) and show no regressions.
The old code checked whether the property began with 'signal-' and
then checked for 'signal-swapped' and 'signal-after'. This prevented
you from animating a property called for example 'signal-strength'.
The check for the prefix is now in a separate function which also adds
a 'signal-swapped-after' prefix for completeness.
Fixes bug:
http://bugzilla.openedhand.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1798
The blend string compiler checks that the syntax of a function name is
[A-Za-z_]*, preventing the use of DOT3_RGB[A].
Signed-off-by: Emmanuele Bassi <ebassi@linux.intel.com>
The column names are optional - ClutterModel will use the GType name
if there is no user-specified column name. Hence, the ::finalize vfunc
should not try to free an empty column names vector.
Fixes bug:
http://bugzilla.openedhand.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1790
The test-script.json UI definition still used old types, like
ClutterLabel and ClutterCloneTexture. It should move to the classes
that have replaced them.
The default floating point type for JSON is double precision; this means
that we need to conver to single precision when setting a property with
type G_TYPE_FLOAT.
We need to test that the depth sorting of ClutterGroup works correctly
in case we wish to change the data structure that stores the children,
and do so without changing the default behaviour.
The get_type() function for ClutterInterval is missing from the
known GObject types, so gtk-doc doesn't know that it has to
introspect it for hierarchy, properties and signals.
Currently, to update a property inside an animation you have to
get the interval for that property and then call the set_final_value()
method.
We can provide a simpler, bind()-like method for the convenience of
the developers that just validates everything and then calls the
Interval.set_final_value().