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d0944b8fbd
This adds a callback that can be registered with cogl_onscreen_add_dirty_callback which will get called whenever the window system determines that the contents of the window is dirty and needs to be redrawn. Under the two X-based winsys's, this is reported off the back of the Expose events, under SDL it is reported from SDL_VIDEOEXPOSE or SDL_WINDOWEVENT_EXPOSED and under Windows from the WM_PAINT messages. The Wayland winsys doesn't really have the concept of dirtying the buffer but in order to allow applications to work the same way on all platforms it will emit the event when the surface is first shown and whenever it is resized. There is a private feature flag to specify whether dirty events are supported. If the winsys does not set this then Cogl will simulate dirty events by emitting one when the window is first allocated and when it is resized. The only winsys's that don't set this flag are things like KMS or the EGL null winsys where there is no windowing system and showing and hiding the onscreen doesn't really make any sense. In that case Cogl can assume the buffer will only become dirty once when it is first allocated. Reviewed-by: Robert Bragg <robert@linux.intel.com> (cherry picked from commit 85c5a9ba419b2247bd768284c79ee69164a0c098) Conflicts: cogl/cogl-private.h |
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build | ||
cogl | ||
cogl-gles2 | ||
cogl-pango | ||
deps | ||
doc | ||
examples | ||
po | ||
tests | ||
.gitignore | ||
.vimrc | ||
autogen.sh | ||
ChangeLog | ||
cogl.doap | ||
config-custom.h | ||
config.h.win32.in | ||
configure.ac | ||
COPYING | ||
Makefile.am | ||
NEWS | ||
README.in |
README for Cogl @COGL_1_VERSION@ =============================================================================== Note: This file is delimited with -- markers so it is possible to split sections out for other purposes, such as for release notes. -- DESCRIPTION ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Cogl is a small open source library for using 3D graphics hardware for rendering. The API departs from the flat state machine style of OpenGL and is designed to make it easy to write orthogonal components that can render without stepping on each others toes. As well as aiming for a nice API, we think having a single library as opposed to an API specification like OpenGL has a few advantages too; like being able to paper over the inconsistencies/bugs of different OpenGL implementations in a centralized place, not to mention the myriad of OpenGL extensions. It also means we are in a better position to provide utility APIs that help software developers since they only need to be implemented once and there is no risk of inconsistency between implementations. Having other backends, besides OpenGL, such as drm, Gallium or D3D are options we are interested in for the future. -- REQUIREMENTS ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Cogl currently only requires: • GLib ≥ @GLIB_REQ_VERSION@ • OpenGL ≥ 1.3 (or 1.2 + multitexturing), or OpenGL ES 2.0 (or 1.1) • GLX, AGL, WGL or an EGL implementation Cogl also has optional dependencies: • GDK-Pixbuf ≥ @GDK_PIXBUF_REQ_VERSION@ - for image loading • Cairo ≥ @CAIRO_REQ_VERSION@ - for debugging texture atlasing (debug builds only) The optional Cogl Pango library requires: • Cairo ≥ @CAIRO_REQ_VERSION@ • PangoCairo ≥ @PANGOCAIRO_REQ_VERSION@ On X11, Cogl depends on the following extensions • XComposite ≥ @XCOMPOSITE_REQ_VERSION@ • XDamage • XExt • XFixes ≥ @XFIXES_REQ_VERSION@ For the Wayland backend, Cogl requires: • Wayland ≥ @WAYLAND_REQ_VERSION@ When running with OpenGL, Cogl requires at least version 1.3 or 1.2 with the multitexturing extension. However to build Cogl you will need the latest GL headers which can be obtained from: http://www.khronos.org If you are building the API reference you will also need: • GTK-Doc ≥ @GTK_DOC_REQ_VERSION@ If you are building the additional documentation you will also need: • xsltproc • jw (optional, for generating PDFs) If you are building the Introspection data you will also need: • GObject-Introspection ≥ @GI_REQ_VERSION@ GObject-Introspection is available from: git://git.gnome.org/gobject-introspection If you want support for profiling Cogl you will also need: • UProf ≥ @UPROF_REQ_VERSION@ UProf is available from: git://github.com/rib/UProf.git -- DOCUMENTATION ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- The 1.x stable API is documented here: http://developer.gnome.org/cogl/stable/ The 1.x development API is documented here: http://developer.gnome.org/cogl/1.$(COGL_1_MINOR_VERSION) The experimental 2.0 API is currently not hosted online but can be built by passing the --enable-gtk-doc option to ./configure when building and the documentation can then be found under doc/reference/cogl-2.0-experimental/html/index.html -- LICENSE ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Most of Cogl is licensed under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public License, version 2.1 or (at your option) later. Some files are licensed under more permissive licenses MIT or BSD style licenses though so please see individual files for details. -- BUILDING AND INSTALLATION ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Please refer to the INSTALL document. -- BUGS ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Please report bugs here: http://bugzilla.gnome.org/enter_bug.cgi?product=cogl You will need a Bugzilla account. Please include the following in bug reports: • what system you're running Cogl on; • which version of Cogl you are using; • which version of GLib and OpenGL (or OpenGL ES) you are using; • which video card and which drivers you are using, including output of glxinfo and xdpyinfo (if applicable); • how to reproduce the bug. If you cannot reproduce the bug with one of the tests that come with Cogl's source code, it can help a lot to include a small test case displaying the bad behaviour. If the bug exposes a crash, the exact text printed out and a stack trace obtained using gdb are greatly appreciated. -- CONTRIBUTING ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- The CODING_STYLE file describes the coding style we use throughout Cogl, please try your best to conform to this style because the consistency really helps keep the code maintainable. We can accept contributions in several ways: • Either as patches attached to bugs on bugzilla - For this you may be interested in using git-bz. See http://git.fishsoup.net/man/git-bz.html for details • You can email us patches - For this we recommend using git-send-email • You can create a remote branch and ask us to pull from that for more substantial changes. - For this we recommend using github. Ideally standalone patches should be created using git format-patch since that makes it easiest to import the patch with a commit message into a git repository.