The protocol specifies that all requests (aside from destroy) are
ignored after the compositor sends the closed event. Therefore,
destroying the wlroots object and rendering the resource inert
when sending the closed event keeps things simpler for wlroots and
compositors.
This wlr_surface_state field was a special case because we don't
want to save the whole current state: for instance, the wlr_buffer
must not be saved or else wouldn't get released soon enough.
Let's just inline the state fields we need instead.
wl_fixed_t is a 32-bit data type, but our doubles are 64-bit. This meant
that two doubles that would map to the same wl_fixed_t could compare
unequal, and send a duplicate motion event.
Refs swaywm/sway#4632.
The protocol allows compositors to not send any keymap to Wayland
clients. Handle a keymap-less keyboard correctly by sending
WL_KEYBOARD_KEYMAP_FORMAT_NO_KEYMAP instead of erroring out in the
mmap call.
When testing a modeset, make sure the caller has also provided a
buffer. This allows df0e75ba05 ("output: try skipping buffer
allocation if the backend allows it") to work as expected with the
DRM backend.
Closes: https://github.com/swaywm/wlroots/issues/3086
When enabling an output, skip the empty buffer allocation if the
backend accepts modesets without a buffer.
This fixes mode-setting with the noop backend.
According to the viewport protocol, upon wp_viewport::destroy():
> The associated wl_surface's crop and scale state is removed.
> The change is applied on the next wl_surface.commit.
Therefore, wp_viewport_destroy(viewport) should remove all viewport state.
Currently, wlroots does not remove the crop and scale state. Instead, a
client must do:
wl_fixed_t clear = wl_fixed_from_int(-1);
wp_viewport_set_source(viewport, clear, clear, clear, clear);
wp_viewport_set_destination(viewport, -1, -1);
wp_viewport_destroy(viewport);
This commit adds the necessary logic into viewport_destroy and makes
wlroots comply with the protocol.
The half-float formats depend on GL_OES_texture_half_float_linear,
not just the GL_OES_texture_half_float extension, because the latter
does not include support for linear magni/minification filters.
The new 2101010 and 16161616F formats are only available on little-
endian builds, since their gl_types are larger than a byte and thus
endianness dependent.
Unless we're dealing with a multi-GPU setup and the backend being
initialized is secondary, we don't need a renderer nor an allocator.
Stop initializing these.
Historically we haven't allowed direct scan-out for legacy KMS,
because legacy misses the functionality to make sure a buffer can
be scanned out. However with renderer v6 the backend can't figure
out anymore whether the buffer comes from its internal swap-chain,
because the backend doesn't have an internal swap-chain.
The legacy KMS API guarantees that the driver won't reject a buffer
as long as it's been allocated with the same parameters as the
previous one. Let's check this in legacy_crtc_test.
Sometimes we allocate a buffer with modifiers but then fail to
perform a modeset with it. This can happen on Intel because of
bandwidth limitations. To mitigate this issue, it's possible to
re-allocate the buffer with modifiers.
Add the logic to do so in wlr_output.