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Author SHA1 Message Date
Robert Bragg
a0441778ad This re-licenses Cogl 1.18 under the MIT license
Since the Cogl 1.18 branch is actively maintained in parallel with the
master branch; this is a counter part to commit 1b83ef938fc16b which
re-licensed the master branch to use the MIT license.

This re-licensing is a follow up to the proposal that was sent to the
Cogl mailing list:
http://lists.freedesktop.org/archives/cogl/2013-December/001465.html

Note: there was a copyright assignment policy in place for Clutter (and
therefore Cogl which was part of Clutter at the time) until the 11th of
June 2010 and so we only checked the details after that point (commit
0bbf50f905)

For each file, authors were identified via this Git command:
$ git blame -p -C -C -C20 -M -M10  0bbf50f905..HEAD

We received blanket approvals for re-licensing all Red Hat and Collabora
contributions which reduced how many people needed to be contacted
individually:
- http://lists.freedesktop.org/archives/cogl/2013-December/001470.html
- http://lists.freedesktop.org/archives/cogl/2014-January/001536.html

Individual approval requests were sent to all the other identified authors
who all confirmed the re-license on the Cogl mailinglist:
http://lists.freedesktop.org/archives/cogl/2014-January

As well as updating the copyright header in all sources files, the
COPYING file has been updated to reflect the license change and also
document the other licenses used in Cogl such as the SGI Free Software
License B, version 2.0 and the 3-clause BSD license.

This patch was not simply cherry-picked from master; but the same
methodology was used to check the source files.
2014-02-22 02:02:53 +00:00
Neil Roberts
534e535a28 Use the Wayland embedded linked list implementation instead of BSD's
This removes cogl-queue.h and adds a copy of Wayland's embedded list
implementation. The advantage of the Wayland model is that it is much
simpler and so it is easier to follow. It also doesn't require
defining a typedef for every list type.

The downside is that there is only one list type which is a
doubly-linked list where the head has a pointer to both the beginning
and the end. The BSD implementation has many more combinations some of
which we were taking advantage of to reduce the size of critical
structs where we didn't need a pointer to the end of the list.

The corresponding changes to uses of cogl-queue.h are:

• COGL_STAILQ_* was used for onscreen the list of events and dirty
  notifications. This makes the size of the CoglContext grow by one
  pointer.

• COGL_TAILQ_* was used for fences.

• COGL_LIST_* for CoglClosures. In this case the list head now has an
  extra pointer which means CoglOnscreen will grow by the size of
  three pointers, but this doesn't seem like a particularly important
  struct to optimise for size anyway.

• COGL_LIST_* was used for the list of foreign GLES2 offscreens.

• COGL_TAILQ_* was used for the list of sub stacks in a
  CoglMemoryStack.

• COGL_LIST_* was used to track the list of layers that haven't had
  code generated yet while generating a fragment shader for a
  pipeline.

• COGL_LIST_* was used to track the pipeline hierarchy in CoglNode.

The last part is a bit more controversial because it increases the
size of CoglPipeline and CoglPipelineLayer by one pointer in order to
have the redundant tail pointer for the list head. Normally we try to
be very careful about the size of the CoglPipeline struct. Because
CoglPipeline is slice-allocated, this effectively ends up adding two
pointers to the size because GSlice rounds up to the size of two
pointers.

Reviewed-by: Robert Bragg <robert@linux.intel.com>

(cherry picked from commit 13abf613b15f571ba1fcf6d2eb831ffc6fa31324)

Conflicts:
	cogl/cogl-context-private.h
	cogl/cogl-context.c
	cogl/driver/gl/cogl-pipeline-fragend-glsl.c
	doc/reference/cogl-2.0-experimental/Makefile.am
2013-06-13 13:45:47 +01:00
Robert Bragg
54735dec84 Switch use of primitive glib types to c99 equivalents
The coding style has for a long time said to avoid using redundant glib
data types such as gint or gchar etc because we feel that they make the
code look unnecessarily foreign to developers coming from outside of the
Gnome developer community.

Note: When we tried to find the historical rationale for the types we
just found that they were apparently only added for consistent syntax
highlighting which didn't seem that compelling.

Up until now we have been continuing to use some of the platform
specific type such as gint{8,16,32,64} and gsize but this patch switches
us over to using the standard c99 equivalents instead so we can further
ensure that our code looks familiar to the widest range of C developers
who might potentially contribute to Cogl.

So instead of using the gint{8,16,32,64} and guint{8,16,32,64} types this
switches all Cogl code to instead use the int{8,16,32,64}_t and
uint{8,16,32,64}_t c99 types instead.

Instead of gsize we now use size_t

For now we are not going to use the c99 _Bool type and instead we have
introduced a new CoglBool type to use instead of gboolean.

Reviewed-by: Neil Roberts <neil@linux.intel.com>

(cherry picked from commit 5967dad2400d32ca6319cef6cb572e81bf2c15f0)
2012-08-06 14:27:39 +01:00
Robert Bragg
b72f255c0a Start to reduce dependence on glib
Since we've had several developers from admirable projects say they
would like to use Cogl but would really prefer not to pull in
gobject,gmodule and glib as extra dependencies we are investigating if
we can get to the point where glib is only an optional dependency.
Actually we feel like we only make minimal use of glib anyway, so it may
well be quite straightforward to achieve this.

This adds a --disable-glib configure option that can be used to disable
features that depend on glib.

Actually --disable-glib doesn't strictly disable glib at this point
because it's more helpful if cogl continues to build as we make
incremental progress towards this.

The first use of glib that this patch tackles is the use of
g_return_val_if_fail and g_return_if_fail which have been replaced with
equivalent _COGL_RETURN_VAL_IF_FAIL and _COGL_RETURN_IF_FAIL macros.

Reviewed-by: Neil Roberts <neil@linux.intel.com>
2011-11-01 12:03:02 +00:00
Robert Bragg
d4459e2d42 pipeline: Split more code out from cogl-pipeline.c
This splits out the core CoglPipelineLayer support code from
cogl-pipeline.c into cogl-pipeline-layer.c; it splits out the debugging
code for dumping a pipeline to a .dot file into cogl-pipeline-debug.c
and it splits the CoglPipelineNode support which is shared between
CoglPipeline and CoglPipelineLayer into cogl-node.c.

Note: cogl-pipeline-layer.c only contains the layer code directly
relating to CoglPipelineLayer objects; it does not contain any
_cogl_pipeline API relating to how CoglPipeline tracks and manipulates
layers.
2011-09-21 17:03:10 +01:00