This is implemented by a two-subpass rendering scheme; the first
subpass draws (and blends) onto a linear R16G16B16A16_SFLOAT buffer,
while the second subpass performs linear->srgb conversion, writing
onto the actual output buffer.
Goals:
- Extensibility: we need to be able to add new params to the calls
to render a texture/rect. For instance we'll need to add fences to
the render texture operation for explicit sync purposes.
- No implicit state: no more bind_buffer, begin, end.
- No matrices: these hurt Pixman and we don't need them.
- Clip regions for optimized damage repainting.
Closes: https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/wlroots/wlroots/-/issues/3188
Add a src_box state field. Use the SRC_* KMS props in the DRM
backend, reject the layers in the Wayland backend (for now, we can
support it later via viewporter).
This allows callers to set a destination size different from the
buffer size to scale them.
The DRM backend supports this. The Wayland backend doesn't yet
(we'd need to wire up viewporter).
since wayland doesn't provide a touch id in cancel events, track what
points are active so we can cancel all of them
timestamp is also not provided - use 0 because no one's paying attention
to that anyway
Closes#3000
- Simplifies the backends
- Avoids having two ways to do the same thing: previously one could
disable a layer by either omitting it from wlr_output_state.layers,
or by passing a NULL buffer
- We can change our mind in the future: we can allow users to omit
some layers and define a meaning without breaking the API.
References: https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/wlroots/wlroots/-/merge_requests/4017#note_1783997
We've had this struct for a while. It'd be useful for compositors
if they want to manage the swap chains themselves instead of being
forced to use wlr_output's. Some compositors might also want to use
a swapchain without an output.
This is based on previous work [1] [2].
This new API allows compositors to display buffers without needing to
perform rendering operations. This API can be implemented on Wayland
using subsurfaces and on DRM using KMS planes.
Compared to [1], this approach leverages wlr_addon_set to let backends
attach their own private state to layers, removes the pending
state (necessary for interop with wlr_output_commit_state()) and
enum wlr_output_layer_state_field.
[1]: https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/wlroots/wlroots/-/merge_requests/1985
[2]: https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/wlroots/wlroots/-/merge_requests/3447
This is needed for compositors that want to reserve space for
XWayland panels. Such a feature can be useful in a "transitional"
setup, where only the X11 window manager and compositor is replaced
but other components of an X11 desktop environment are still used.
This change simply reads the X11 property; the compositor is free
to ignore it. Thus, compositors that don't want to support such a
"transitional" feature are not impacted.
v2: Update xwayland_surface_associate()
Instead of destroying all seats, destroy a single one. We only need
to destroy all seats at one call-site (backend_destroy), but we'll
need to destroy a single seat elsewhere in the next commit.
wlr_xcursor_get_resize_name() returns cursor-spec [1] based names
but the default cursor icons shipped in include/xcursor/cursor_data.h
use traditional X cursor names instead.
Compositors that use wlr_xcursor_get_resize_name() to resolve an edge
to a cursor icon name may thus be unable to render appropriate cursor
icons for users that don't have a cursor-spec compliant cursor theme
installed on their system or have it installed in an unusual place.
This patch adds cursor-spec cursor icon name aliases.
[1] https://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/Specifications/cursor-spec/
Since 1d581656c7 ("backend/drm: set "max bpc" to the max") we
set the "max bpc" property to the maximum value. The kernel driver
is supposed to clamp this value depending on hardware capabilities.
All kernel drivers lower the value depending on the GPU capabilities.
However, none of the drivers lower the value depending on the DP-MST
link capabilities. Thus, enabling a 4k@60Hz mode can fail on some
DP-MST setups due to the "max bpc" property.
Additionally, it's not a good idea to unconditionally set "max bpc"
to the max. A high bpc consumes more lanes and more clock speed,
which means higher power consumption and the busy lanes cannot be
used for something else (e.g. other data transfers on a USB-C cable).
For now, let's tie the "max bpc" to the pixel format of the buffer.
Introduce a heuristic to make "high bit-depth buffer" a synonym of
"I want the best quality".
This is not perfect: a "max bpc" higher than 8 might be desirable
for pixel formats with a color depth of 8 bits, for instance when
the color management KMS properties are used. But we don't really
support that yet, so let's leave this for later.
Closes: https://github.com/swaywm/sway/issues/7367
The invalid_destroy and invalid_unlock protocol errors aren't currently
sent by wlroots and instead left up to the compositor. However, we can
handle these as well without much additional complexity.
This also adds a missing wl_resource_destroy() call if the lock is inert
in lock_handle_unlock_and_destroy().
We only need it for one thing: gamma size. Moreover, some bits in
the drmModeCrtc will become out-of-date, for instance the current
mode, so let's avoid caching the whole struct and only keep what
we know won't change.
Instead of having a pending_fb field on the struct wlr_drm_plane,
move it to struct wlr_drm_connector_state. That way, there's no
risk having a stale pending FB around: the state doesn't survive
across tests and commits.
The cursor is a special case because it's disconnected from the
atomic state: the wlr_backend_impl.set_cursor hook sets the cursor
for the next commit. Move the field to
wlr_drm_connector.cursor_pending_fb.
We'll move the pending primary FB into the connector state in the
next commit, dropping wlr_drm_plane.pending_fb in the process.
Introduce a dedicated field for the cursor, which has to be managed
in a special way due to our set_cursor API.
This avoids re-building the whole project when switching one
Meson option. This shrinks down the compiler invocation command
line, making it more readable and making it easier to inspect
which flags are passed in (the generated file can be opened).
Additionally this is more consistent with our external feature
handling, which uses <wlr/config.h> already.
The Vulkan spec doesn't guarantee that the driver will wait for
implicitly synchronized client buffers before texturing from them.
radv happens to perform the wait, but anv doesn't.
Fix this by extracting implicit fences from DMA-BUFs, importing
them into Vulkan as a VkSemaphore objects, and make the render pass
wait on these VkSemaphores.
wlroots uses "// private state" comments to denote structure fields
which shouldn't be accessed by compositors, so let's drop
wlr_output_layout_output_state and inline its fields into
wlr_output_layout_output; this also simplifies layout output creation.
struct wlr_vk_format_props contains a mix of properties for shm
and dmabuf, and it's not immediately clear which fields are for
which kind of buffer. Use a nested struct to group the fields.
Query the formats at init time, then forget about the renderer.
This will allow wl_drm to be created with a list of formats instead
of a renderer, and will behave better after a GPU reset.
The backend no longer changes the output state behind the
compositor's back. Instead, compositors can listen to the "commit"
event and check for WLR_OUTPUT_STATE_ENABLED/WLR_OUTPUT_STATE_MODE.
Closes: https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/wlroots/wlroots/-/issues/2300
Some compositors may want to use the linux-dmabuf-v1 implementation
with a completely custom renderer. Add a function to create the
global with a default feedback.
Right now the Vulkan renderer blocks until the frame is complete
after rendering. This is necessary because Vulkan doesn't
interoperate well with implicit sync we use everywhere else.
Use the new kernel API to import a sync_file into a DMA-BUF to
avoid blocking.
We need to wait for the pending command buffer to complete before
re-using stage buffers. Otherwise we'll overwrite the stage buffer
with new contents before the texture is fully uploaded.
We need to wait for any pending command buffer to complete before
we're able to fully destroy a struct wlr_vk_texture: the Vulkan
spec requires the VkDescriptorSet to be kept alive.
So far we've done this in vulkan_end(), after blocking until the
command buffer completes. We'll soon stop blocking, so move this
logic in get_command_buffer(), where we check which commands buffers
have completed in a non-blocking fashion.
vkCmdCopyBufferToImage requires that the buffer offset be a multiple
of the texel block size, which for single plane uncompressed formats
is the same as the number of bytes per pixel. This commit adds an
alignment parameter to vulkan_get_stage_span which ensures that the
provided span (and the sequence of image copy operations derived which
use it) have this alignment.
0xFFFFFFFF milliseconds is 4,294,967,295 ms so about 50 days.
A little bit too close for comfort.
Use int64_t instead of uint64_t to avoid C's implicit conversion
footguns in computations.
This is a first step towards moving texture uploading out of
wlr_compositor.
This commit allows compositors to opt-out of the texture uploading
by passing a NULL wlr_renderer. An immediate user of this is
gamescope, which currently implements a stub wlr_renderer just to
make wlr_compositor happy.
Let's just forward-declare struct wlr_backend instead.
We need to fixup the Vulkan renderer: it needs makedev(), which
got included by chance via <wlr/backend.h> → <wlr/backend/session.h>
→ <libudev.h>.
This can be used to know when wlr_xwayland_server decides to start
a new Xwayland process. At that point the wl_client has already
been created but the Xwayland process hasn't been started yet.
Up until now, wlr_backend_autocreate() created the wlr_session and
then stuffed it into struct wlr_multi_backend so that compositors
can grab it later.
This is an abuse of wlr_multi_backend and the wlr_backend API:
wlr_backend_get_session() and wlr_multi_backend.session only exist
to accomodate the needs of wlr_backend_autocreate(). What's more,
the DRM and libinput backends don't implement
wlr_backend_impl.get_session.
Instead, return the struct wlr_session to the compositor in the
wlr_backend_autocreate() call. wlr_backend_get_session() will be
removed in the next commit.
This is a re-implementation of wl_shm. The motivations for using
this over the one shipped in libwayland are:
- Properly handle SIGBUS when accessing a wl_buffer's underlying
data after the wl_buffer protocol object has been destroyed.
With the current code, we just crash if the client does that
and then shrinks the backing file.
- No need to fight the wl_shm_buffer API anymore. This was awkward
because we weren't notified when clients created a wl_shm buffer,
and this doesn't play well with our wlr_buffer abstraction.
- Access to the underlying FD. This makes it possible to forward
the wl_shm buffer to a parent compositor with the Wayland/X11
backends.
- Better stride checks. We can use our format table to ensure that
the stride is consistent with the bpp and width.
We'll use this function from wlr_shm too.
Add some assertions, use int32_t (since the wire protocol uses that,
and we don't want to use 16-bit integers on exotic systems) and
switch the stride check to be overflow-safe.
Call glGetGraphicsResetStatusKHR in wlr_renderer_begin to figure
out when a GPU reset occurs. Destroy the renderer when this
happens (the OpenGL context is defunct).
The concept of a persistent accumulated surface offset is wrong
from a protocol point-of-view. wl_surface.offset is tied to a
commit, its interpretation depends on the surface role.
For example, with the following sequence:
wl_surface@1.offset(1, 1)
wl_surface@1.commit()
wl_pointer@2.set_cursor(wl_surface@1, 42, 42)
The final cursor hotspot is (42, 42): the commit which happened
before the set_cursor request has no impact on the hotspot
computation.
The wlr_output_cursor logic already uses wlr_surface.current.{dx,dy}.
wlr_scene's drag icon doesn't, update it accordingly.
Allow to get whether has alpha channel of the VkImage, it can help an
optimization to disable blending when the texture doesn't have alpha.
Because the VkFormat isn't enough because it's always set to
VK_FORMAT_B8G8R8A8_SRGB or VK_FORMAT_R8G8B8A8_SRGB.
This allows compositors to indicate which features they support,
and is required to eventually make this API stable.
References: https://github.com/swaywm/sway/issues/7260
32daa43a45 has removed the asymmetry in
the relationship of a wlr_surface and an unmapped wlr_xwayland_surface,
when wlr_surface.role_data wasn't NULL but wlr_xwayland_surface.surface
was. However, this also means that
wlr_xwayland_surface_from_wlr_surface() now returns NULL if the
wlr_surface is unmapped. Fix the documentation to reflect this.
Before re-using a VkCommandBuffer, we need to wait for its
operations to complete. Right now we unconditionally wait for
rendering to complete in vulkan_end(), however we have plans to
fix this [1]. To fully avoid blocking, we need to handle multiple
command buffers in flight at the same time (e.g. for multi-output,
or for rendering followed by texture uploads).
Implement a pool of command buffers. When we need to render, we
pick a command buffer from the pool which has completed its
operations. If we don't find one, try to allocate a new command
buffer. If we don't have slots in the pool anymore, block like we
did before.
[1]: https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/wlroots/wlroots/-/merge_requests/3574
Up until now we were using a VkFence for GPU-to-CPU
synchronization. This has some limitations that become a blocker
when trying to have multiple command buffers in flight at once
(e.g. for multi-output). It's desirable to implement a command
buffer pool [1], but VkFence cannot be used to track command buffer
completion for individual subpasses.
Let's just switch to timeline semaphores [2], which fix this issue,
make synchronization a lot more ergonomic and are a core Vulkan 1.2
feature.
[1]: https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/wlroots/wlroots/-/merge_requests/3802
[2]: https://www.khronos.org/blog/vulkan-timeline-semaphores
Added wlr_vk_renderer_get_* functions to allow get the VkInstance,
VkPhysicalDevice, VkDevice, queue family of a wlr_vk_renderer.
Added wlr_vk_renderer_get_current_image_attribs function to allow get
the VkImage of current renderer buffer to use on compositors.
Added wlr_renderer_is_vk function, it's like the wlr_renderer_is_gles2,
returns true if the wlr_renderer is a wlr_vk_renderer.
Added wlr_vk_image_get_attribs function to get a VkImage and it's
extras information (e.g. a VkImageLayout and VkImageFormat of the
VkImage) from a wlr_texture.
In wlroots we add comments near struct wl_list members to indicate
which type it's linked to. The Vulkan renderer had some comments
with mistakes, and some members without a comment.
We were crashing in the error codepath [1] when
wlr_drm_create_lease() fails.
To fix this, delay the creation of the wlr_drm_lease_v1 until the
request is granted. Previously we were allocating that struct early
without populating the drm_lease field. However that means we ended
up with a half-constructed struct in the error codepath which is
annoying to handle.
[1]: https://github.com/swaywm/sway/issues/7204#issuecomment-1269797356
This field becomes stale too easily: for instance, see 6adca4089c
("backend/drm: don't unconditionally set desired_enabled").
Additionally, drm_connector_alloc_crtc() needs to do some weird
dance, restoring its previous value.
Instead, add a connector arg to realloc_crtcs() to indicate a new
connector we want to enable.
When starting up, the compositor might call wlr_output_set_mode()
with a mode which is already the current one. wlroots will detect
this and make the wlr_output_set_mode() call a no-op. During the
next wlr_output_commit() call, wlroots will perform an atomic
commit without the ALLOW_MODESET flag.
This is an issue, because some drivers need ALLOW_MODESET even if
the mode is the same. For instance, if the FB stride or modifier
changed, some drivers require a modeset.
Add a new flag "allow_artifacts" which is set when the compositor
calls mode-setting functions. Use this flag to figure out whether
we want to perform atomic commits with ALLOW_MODESET.
(The name "allow_artifacts" is picked because ALLOW_MODESET is a
misnomer, see [1].)
[1]: https://patchwork.freedesktop.org/patch/505107/
Closes: https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/wlroots/wlroots/-/issues/3499
Instead of using low-level wl_shm_buffer and wlr_dmabuf_v1_buffer
APIs, use the unified wlr_buffer APIs. That way it doesn't matter
what the exact wlr_buffer implementation is used, any which provides
the necessary capabilities (data_ptr or dmabuf) would work.
Simplifies the logic a bit, and will make the transition to wlr_shm
easier.
CTA-861-H defines a picture aspect ratio which may be attached to
each mode. This affects the way the sink will display the image.
See annexes H.1 and H.2 for examples.
See the spec at [1]. tl;dr EGL has terrible defaults: eglTerminate()
may have side-effects on completely unrelated EGLDisplay objects.
This extension allows us to opt-in to get the sane behavior:
eglTerminate() only free's our own EGLDisplay without affecting
others.
[1]: https://registry.khronos.org/EGL/extensions/KHR/EGL_KHR_display_reference.txt
wlr_buffer.c is difficult to read because it contains a mixed bag
of unrelated things: base buffer type, buffer implementations,
buffer resource factory, and client buffer.
Split each of these into their own file.
dac040f87f mistakenly renamed
xdg_surface_destroy listener, which was listening to *unmap* events, to
xdg_surface_unmap. The actual fix, however, is to listen to destroy
events. This fixes various crashes.
Previously, adaptive sync was just a hint and wouldn't make any
atomic commit fail if the backend didn't support it. The main reason
is wlr_output_test wasn't supported at the time.
Now that we have a way for compositors to test whether a change can
work, let's remove the exception for adaptive sync and convert it to
a regular output state field.
array_realloc will grow the array for the target size like wl_insert_add, but
will also shrink the array if the target size is sufficiently smaller than the
current allocation.
This lets the renderer handle the wlr_buffer directly, just like it
does in texture_from_buffer. This also allows the renderer to batch
the rectangle updates, and update more than the damage region if
desirable (e.g. too many rects), so can be more efficient.
We were firing the new_input signal on backend initialization,
before the compositor had the chance to add a listener for it.
Mimick what's done for wl_keyboard: if the backend hasn't been
started, delay wl_touch initialization.
Closes: https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/wlroots/wlroots/-/issues/3473
When the client doesn't support high-resolution scroll, accumulate
deltas until we can notify a discrete event.
Some mice have a free spinning wheel, making possible to lock the wheel
when the accumulator value is not 0. To avoid synchronization issues
between the mouse wheel and the accumulators, store the last delta and
when the scroll direction changes, reset the accumulator.
On newer versions of libinput, the event LIBINPUT_EVENT_POINTER_AXIS
has been deprecated in favour of LIBINPUT_EVENT_POINTER_SCROLL_WHEEL,
LIBINPUT_EVENT_POINTER_SCROLL_FINGER and
LIBINPUT_EVENT_POINTER_SCROLL_CONTINUOUS.
Where new events are provided by the backend, ignore
LIBINPUT_EVENT_POINTER_AXIS, receive high-resolution scroll events from
libinput and emit the appropiate wlr_pointer signal.
Currently, the "wlr_event_pointer_axis" event stores low-resolution
values in its "delta_discrete" field. Low-resolution values are always
multiples of one, i.e., 1 for one wheel detent, 2 for two wheel
detents, etc.
In order to simplify internal handling of events, always transform in
the backend from the low-resolution value into the high-resolution
value.
The transformation is performed by multiplying by 120. The 120 magic
number is used by the kernel and it is exposed to clients in the
"WLR_POINTER_AXIS_DISCRETE_STEP" constant.
wlr_xdg_surface_from_wlr_surface() for example may return NULL even if
the surface has the xdg surface role if the corresponding xdg surface
has been destroyed.
"max bpc" is a maximum value, the driver is free to choose a
smaller value depending on the bandwidth available.
Some faulty monitors misbehave with higher bpc values. We'll add
a workaround if users get hit by these in practice.
References: https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/wayland/weston/-/issues/612
Whether a texture is opaque or not doesn't depend on the renderer
at all, it just depends on the source buffer. Instead of forcing
all renderers to implement wlr_texture_impl.is_opaque, let's move
this in common code and use the wlr_buffer format to know whether
a texture will be opaque.
This refactors output_ensure_buffer() to not mutate the state passed,
making the previous subtle behavior much more explicit.
Fixes: d483dd2f ("output: add wlr_output_commit_state")
Closes: #3442
CTA-861-G says that "graphics" is used to indicate non-analog (ie,
digital) content. With that bit set, the sink should turn off analog
reconstruction and other related filtering.
This commit ensures that outputs that weren't created by the output
layout helper aren't destroyed on the output layout change.
Consider the following piece of logic:
// struct wlr_output *o1, *o2;
// struct wlr_scene *scene;
// struct wlr_output_layout *layout;
wlr_scene_attach_output_layout(scene, layout);
wlr_output_layout_add_auto(layout, o1);
struct wlr_scene_output *so2 = wlr_scene_output_create(scene, o2);
wlr_output_layout_move(layout, o1, 100, 200);
// so2 is invalid now
Now that the DRM backend no longer depends on GBM, we can make it
optional. The GLES2 renderer still depends on it because of our EGL
device selection.
This is useful for compositors with their own renderers, and for
compositors using the Vulkan renderer.
This allows the make/model/serial to be NULL when unset, and allows
them to be longer than the hardcoded array length.
This is a breaking change: compositors need to handle the new NULL
case, and we stop setting make/model to useless "headless" or
"wayland" strings.
These are trivial wrappers around eglMakeCurrent and
eglGetCurrentContext. Compositors which need to call these
functions will also call other EGL or GL functions anyways. Let's
reduce our API surface a bit by making them private.
This will display red translucent rectangles on the screen regions that
have been damaged. These rectangles will fade out over the span of 250
msecs. If the area is damaged again while the region is fading out,
the timer is reset.
Let's also disable direct scan out when this option is enabled, or else
we won't be able to render the highlight damage regions.
After cancelation we destroy the touch points associated with this
surface as the Wayland spec says:
No further events are sent to the clients from that particular gesture.
Touch cancellation applies to all touch points currently active on this
client's surface. The client is responsible for finalizing the touch
points, future touch points on this surface may re-use the touch point
ID.
Closes: https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/wlroots/wlroots/-/issues/2999
This function sidesteps damage tracking and output awareness on
buffers/surfaces. This function isn't a great fit for the API.
Let's also inline the function and simplify it.
There were a couple places this was missing
- on mode change of an output. If the resolution changes for example
nodes may fall out of the view.
- on commits on an output for scale or transform changes
- when the transform of a buffer is changed. If the dest size is not
set, the buffer may have been rotated potentially changing its size
if the buffer width != height
With protocol additions such as [1], compositors currently have no
way to opt out of the version upgrade. The protocol upgrade will
always be backwards-compatible but may require new compositor
features.
The status quo doesn't make it possible to ship a protocol addition
without breaking the wlroots API. This will be an issue for API
stabilization [2].
To address this, let compositors provide a maximum version in the
function creating the global. We need to support all previous versions
of the interface anyways because of older clients.
This mechanism works the same way as Wayland clients passing a version
in wl_global.bind.
[1]: https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/wlroots/wlroots/-/merge_requests/3514
[2]: https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/wlroots/wlroots/-/issues/1008
References: https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/wlroots/wlroots/-/issues/3397
Maintaining our internal table up-to-date is tedious: one needs to
manually go through the PnP ID registry [1] and check whether we're
missing any entry.
udev_hwdb already has an API to fetch a manufacturer name from its
PnP ID. Use that instead.
[1]: https://uefi.org/pnp_id_list
These formats require EXT_texture_norm16, which in turn needs OpenGL
ES 3.1. The EXT_texture_norm16 extension does not support passing
gl_internalformat = GL_RGBA to glTexImage2D, as can be done for
formats available in OpenGL ES 2.0, so this commit adds a field to
wlr_gles2_pixel_format to provide a more specific internalformat
parameter to glTexImage2D.
The original commit introduced a bug by transposing the order of
some of the fields in xcb_size_hints_t. Since XCB ICCCM support is
required now, we can just eliminate the duplicate structs.
With minor changes:
- Remove #ifdef HAS_XCB_ICCCM guards
- Fix #includes
- Fix references to local size_hints struct
This reverts commit 12b9b1a4bd.
All the code logic related to the pointer has been moved to its own file.
The seat is responsible for the lifetime of its wlr_wl_pointer(s), and assigning
them to the relevant wlr_wl_output. The wlr_wl_pointer becomes a simple helper
to manager the wlr_pointer associated to the seat's wl_pointer and its lifetime.
This was originally added in 810c7b7 for use in rootston's input config
handling. It has never actually been part of the wlroots API and
shouldn't exist.
The destroy callback in wlr_touch_impl has been removed. The function
`wlr_touch_finish` has been introduced to clean up the resources owned by a
wlr_touch.
`wlr_input_device_destroy` no longer destroys the wlr_touch, attempting to
destroy a wlr_touch will result in a no-op.
The field `name` has been added to the wlr_touch_impl to be able to identify
a given wlr_touch device.
The destroy callback in wlr_tablet_tool_impl has been removed. The function
`wlr_tablet_tool_finish` has been introduced to clean up the resources owned by
a wlr_tablet_tool.
`wlr_input_device_destroy` no longer destroys the wlr_tablet_tool, attempting to
destroy a wlr_tablet_tool will result in a no-op.
The field `name` has been added to the wlr_tablet_tool_impl to be able to
identify a given wlr_tablet_tool device.
The destroy callback in wlr_tablet_pad_impl has been removed. The function
`wlr_tablet_pad_finish` has been introduced to clean up the resources owned by a
wlr_tablet_pad.
`wlr_input_device_destroy` no longer destroys the wlr_tablet_pad, attempting to
destroy a wlr_tablet_pad will result in a no-op.
The field `name` has been added to the wlr_tablet_pad_impl to be able to identify
a given wlr_tablet_pad device.
The destroy callback in wlr_switch_impl has been removed. The function
`wlr_switch_finish` has been introduced to clean up the resources owned by a
wlr_switch.
`wlr_input_device_destroy` no longer destroys the wlr_switch, attempting to
destroy a wlr_switch will result in a no-op.
The field `name` has been added to the wlr_switch_impl to be able to identify
a given wlr_switch device.
The destroy callback in wlr_pointer_impl has been removed. The function
`wlr_pointer_finish` has been introduced to clean up the resources owned by a
wlr_pointer.
`wlr_input_device_destroy` no longer destroys the wlr_pointer, attempting to
destroy a wlr_pointer will result in a no-op.
The field `name` has been added to the wlr_pointer_impl to be able to identify
a given wlr_pointer device.
The destroy member in wlr_keyboard_impl has been removed. The function
`wlr_keyboard_finish` has been introduce to clean up the resources owned by a
wlr_keyboard.
`wlr_input_device_destroy` no longer destroys the wlr_keyboard, attempting to
destroy a wlr_keyboard will result in a no-op.
The field `name` has been added to the wlr_keyboard_impl to be able to identify
a given wlr_keyboard device.
This removes an artificial limitation in form of an assert that disallowed the
creation of textures while the renderer is rendering.
A consumer might run its own rendering pipeline and after start of the renderer
still want to create textures for internal usage.
To be consistent with other wlr_xdg_* structs,
wlr_xdg_positioner_resource is renamed to wlr_xdg_positioner and made
public, and wlr_xdg_positioner is renamed to wlr_xdg_positioner_rules.
Functions which operated on wlr_xdg_positioner were renamed and updated
accordingly.
In case the `wlr_input_device` is not owned by a specialized input device, the
function will finish the wlr_input_device and call it's implementation destroy
function if an implementation has been supplied, or simply free it.
The wlroots APIs currently don't allow importing/uploading a buffer
during rendering operations. Scene-graph buffer nodes need to turn
their wlr_buffer into a wlr_texture at some point. It's not always
possible to do so at wlr_scene_buffer creation time because the
scene-graph may have zero outputs at this point, thus no way to
grab a wlr_renderer.
Instead, add scene-graph buffers to a pending list and try to import
them in wlr_scene_output_commit.
References: https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/wlroots/wlroots/-/issues/3354
Currently the output enter event is never sent if the client has not
yet bound the output, which happens every time the compositor creates a
new output.
To fix this, listen for the output bind event and inform clients as
if needed.
Allows the compositor to submit tokens to the pool of
currently active tokens. This can be useful when the
launcher doesn't use or support xdg-activation-v1 by
itself - e.g. when it is X11 based or use gtk_shell1.
This doesn't work if scene outputs are not used as the primary output of
scene surfaces will always be NULL.
Therefore, take a wlr_scene_output instead of separate wlr_scene and
wlr_output arguments and rename the function to
wlr_scene_output_send_frame_done().
The actual behavior of the function is unchanged.