This brings the latest released versions of all used Wayland protocol
files into this repository, removing the need for the user to arrange
a sufficiently new version of wayland-protocols.
The wayland.xml protocol file was copied from wayland 1.22.0.
The additional protocol files were copied from wayland-protocols 1.32.
Because of how files are moved and renamed inside the wayland-protocols
repository, it will not always be possible to update all our protocol
files from a single release without also potentially updating related
code (acceptable) and prematurely breaking compatibility with
compositors that still only support an earlier incompatible version
(unacceptable).
The macro in src/CMakeLists.txt has been modified to hopefully make it
easier to add new protocol files. This made it necessary to change the
name of a few of the generated header files.
Closes#2053
This replaces (one case of) manual management of weak links between
windows and monitors, both objects with complex life times, with
wl_object pointers used as opaque key values.
This is in preparation for adding support for libdecor, which creates
its own proxies on our display. It will likely also be helpful to some
people using native access on Wayland.
This is partly based on the implementation of libdecor support in
PR #1693 by @ christianrauch.
Content scale events would be emitted when a window surface entered or
left an output, but not when one of a window's current outputs had its
scale changed.
GLFW would report a monitor as connected each time its wl_output
received an update, for example if its scale changed.
This would also cause the monitor to be added to the monitor array
again, causing glfwTerminate to segfault when it attempted to destroy
its already destroyed wl_output.
This adds compile-time support for multiple platforms and runtime
detection of them. Window system related platform functions are now
called from shared code via the function pointer struct _GLFWplatform.
The timer, thread and module loading platform functions are still called
directly by name and the implementation chosen at link-time. These
functions are the same for any backend on a given OS, including the Null
backend.
The platforms are now enabled via CMake dependent options following the
GLFW_BUILD_<platform> pattern instead of a mix of automagic and ad-hoc
option names. There is no longer any option for the Null backend as it
is now always enabled.
Much of the struct stitching work in platform.h was based on an earlier
experimental branch for runtime platform selection by @ronchaine.
Every platform function related to windows, contexts, monitors, input,
event processing and Vulkan have been renamed so that multiple sets of
them can exist without colliding. Calls to these are now routed through
the _glfw.platform struct member. These changes makes up most of this
commit.
For Wayland and X11 the client library loading and display creation is
used to detect a running compositor/server. The XDG_SESSION_TYPE
environment variable is ignored for now, as X11 is still by far the more
complete implementation.
Closes#1655Closes#1958
This adds the glfwInitAllocator function for specifying a custom memory
allocator to use instead of the C runtime library.
The allocator is a struct of type GLFWallocator with fields
corresponding to malloc, realloc and free, while the internal API
corresponds to calloc, realloc and free.
Heap allocation calls are filtered before reaching the user-provided
functions, so deallocation of NULL and allocations of zero bytes are not
passed on, reallocating NULL is transformed into an allocation and
reallocating to size zero is transformed into deallocation.
The clearing of a new block to zero is performed by the internal
calloc-like function.
Closes#544.
Fixes#1628.
Closes#1947.
The insight to use wayland.xml to resolve the difficult-to-redirect
interface symbols was gleaned from SDL.
Instead of compiling the code output of wayland-scanner separately it is
made part of the wl_init compilation unit. This lets us do things like
transparently rename our copies of Wayland globals.
The OS version of wayland-client-protocol.h is no longer used by GLFW,
but it is presumably ABI compatible with the output of wayland-scanner.
Closes#1174.
Closes#1338.
Related to #1655.
Closes#1943.
This removes the dependency on the (unspecified) ordering of geometry
and mode events in wl_output.
Based on feedback from @linkmauve and @caramelli.
Related to #1792.
This adds two new error codes: GLFW_FEATURE_UNAVAILABLE for when
a GLFW feature cannot be reasonably implemented on that platform, and
GLFW_FEATURE_UNIMPLEMENTED for when it can be but has not been yet.
This replaces the current situation where the Wayland code emitted
GLFW_PLATFORM_ERROR in both cases while the macOS code silently did
nothing.
If your application exits on any GLFW error, these error codes should at
least be easy to filter out from that behavior.
Ideally, GLFW_FEATURE_UNAVAILABLE should be rare and
GLFW_FEATURE_UNIMPLEMENTED should never be emitted at all.
Fixes#1692.
Commit 9c513346ad ("Gamma will never be
supported on Wayland") made it clear that it cannot be implemented, so
this removes the TODO markers and rewords the error messages.
Related to #1387.
This adds glfwGetWindowContentScale and glfwGetMonitorContentScale for
querying the recommended drawing scale factor for DPI-aware rendering.
Parts of this patch are based on code by @ferreiradaselva.
Fixes#235.
Fixes#439.
Fixes#677.
Fixes#845.
Fixes#898.
glfwGetMonitorName()’s documentation says “this function returns a
human-readable name”, which “typically reflects the make and model of
the monitor”. We get these two strings in the geometry event, so we
only set the name at this point.
Windows now keep track of the monitors they are on, so we can calculate
the best scaling factor for them, by using the maximum of each of the
monitors.
The compositor scales down the buffer automatically when it is on a
lower density monitor, instead of the previous way where it was scaling
up the buffer on higher density monitors, which makes the application
look much better on those ones.