In Wayland clients can commit transformed surfaces, so the compositor
can directly use them on hardware planes. We already support that
for other surfaces, this is the first step to also support it on
cursor sprites.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/526
This may be used indirectly before creation as we dispatch libinput events
right after creation (to let input devices be known), so those device
additions would trigger the touch-mode checks.
Creating it in advance results in checks being correctly performed, although
redundantly.
Spotted by Bastien Nocera.
Closes: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/issues/1067
When applying a configuration to XRANDR, we first disable CRTCs that
happen to extend outside of the to-be X11 screen size. While doing so,
we fail to actually check whether the CRTC is active or not, meaning
we'll try to query the content of the CRTC configuration even though it
has none, leading to a NULL pointer dereference.
Fix this by simply ignoring non-configured CRTCs.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1093
This adds a new frameclock tracing mark for a single cycle of the frame
clock. Doing so allows Sysprof to potentially do more with the information
that happens during the frameclock. For example, we can now find
allocations that happen while the frame clock is advancing.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/1088
offset_scale_and_clamp_region() creates a new region resulting in
view_damage which at this point is the only thing left pointing to what
originally was fb_damage getting overwritten and being leaked.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/1089
While the old merge request URLs still work, gitlab recently started
including an additional /- for merge requests.
Adjust the regex to account for that, so that simply copying the URL
from gitlab works again.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/1090
The stage window handled the redraw clip in a global manner; this would
interfere if we want to paint views individually as it'd mean
intersecting views (i.e. mirrored monitors) would loose the redraw clip
once the first view was painted. It also is awkward to have a global
state for something that is built up before redrawing, and only really
valid during paint, due to buffer damage history.
This commits removes all redraw clip management from the stage window,
moving it all into the stage views. When a redraw clip is added to the
stage, every affected view will get the same redraw clip added to it,
and eventually when painted, the stage window (ClutterStageCogl) will
retrieve the redraw clip for each view as it repaints them.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/1042
Instead of users fetching it via `clutter_stage_get_redraw_clip()`, pass
it via the paint context. This is helpful as it is only valid during a
paint, making it more obvious that it needs to be handled differently
when there is no redraw clip (i.e. we're painting off-screen).
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/1042
Add a helper that scales and clamps a region, aimed to be used when
transforming between framebuffer coordinate space and view coordinate
spaces.
This helps readability by moving out the verbose for loops that deals
with the individual rects of a region to the helper, making the logic
where it's used much simpler.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/1042
The 'have_clip' variable has repeatedly confused me to meaning that
there is a clip. What it actually means is that the effective clip
covers the whole view; the 'redraw_clip == NULL' meaning full redraw is
an important implementation detail for the context, and makes the
intention of the variable unclear; especially since we will after a
couple of blocks will *always* have a clip, just that it covers the
whole view.
Rename the variable to 'is_full_redraw' and negate the meaning, aiming
to make things a lot more clear.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/1042
When calculating the fallback framebuffer clip region, which should be
the region in framebuffer coordinates, we didn't scale the view layout
with the view framebuffer scale, meaning for any other scale than 1,
we'd draw a too small region of the view. Fix this by just using the
size of the framebuffer directly, avoiding any scale dependent
calculation all together.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/1042
We'll expect a swap event if any of the view paints resulted in a swap;
make the logic dealing with this clearer by making changing the less
vilible '|| swap_event' postfix with a up front '|=' operator.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/1042
Prior to this commit the stage was drawn separately for each logical
monitor. This allowed to draw different parts of the stage with
different transformations, e.g. with a different viewport to implement
HiDPI support.
Go even further and have one view per CRTC. This causes the stage to
e.g. draw two mirrored monitors twice, instead of using the same
framebuffer on both. This enables us to do two things: one is to support
tiled monitors and monitor mirroring using the EGLStreams backend; the
other is that it'll enable us to tie rendering directly to the CRTC it
will render for. It is also a requirement for rendering being affected
by CRTC state, such as gamma.
It'll be possible to still inhibit re-drawing of the same content
twice, but it should be implemented differently, so that it will still
be possible to implement features requiring the CRTC split.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/1042
To make it more reliable to distinguish between values that are read
from the backend implementation (which is likely to be irrelevant for
anything but the backend implementation), split out those values (e.g.
layout).
This changes the meaning of what was MetaCrtc::rect, to a
MetaCrtcConfig::layout which is the layout the CRTC has in the global
coordinate space.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/1042
This only needs to be initialized once but is in the hot path of creating
new paint nodes (for which we create many). Instead, do this as part of
the clutter_init() workflow to keep it out of the hot path.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/1087
When calculating regions, a lot of temporary allocations are created. For
the array of rects (which is often a short number of them) we can use
stack allocations up to 1 page (256 cairo_rectangle_int_t). For building
a region of rectangles, cairo and pixman are much faster if you have all
of the rectangles up front or else it mallocs quite a bit of temporary
memory.
If we re-use the cairo_rectangle_int_t array we've already allocated (and
preferably on the stack), we can delay the creation of regions until after
the tight loop.
Additionally, it requires fewer allocations to union two cairo_region_t
than to incrementally union the rectangles into the region.
Before (percentages are of total number of allocations)
TOTAL FUNCTION
[ 100.00%] [Everything]
[ 100.00%] [gnome-shell --wayland --display-server]
[ 99.67%] _start
[ 99.67%] __libc_start_main
[ 99.67%] main
[ 98.60%] meta_run
[ 96.90%] g_main_loop_run
[ 96.90%] g_main_context_iterate.isra.0
[ 96.90%] g_main_context_dispatch
[ 90.27%] clutter_clock_dispatch
[ 86.54%] _clutter_stage_do_update
[ 85.00%] clutter_stage_cogl_redraw
[ 84.98%] clutter_stage_cogl_redraw_view
[ 81.09%] cairo_region_union_rectangle
After (overhead has much dropped)
TOTAL FUNCTION
[ 100.00%] [Everything]
[ 99.80%] [gnome-shell --wayland --display-server]
[ 99.48%] _start
[ 99.48%] __libc_start_main
[ 99.48%] main
[ 92.37%] meta_run
[ 81.49%] g_main_loop_run
[ 81.49%] g_main_context_iterate.isra.0
[ 81.43%] g_main_context_dispatch
[ 39.40%] clutter_clock_dispatch
[ 26.93%] _clutter_stage_do_update
[ 25.80%] clutter_stage_cogl_redraw
[ 25.60%] clutter_stage_cogl_redraw_view
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/1071
g_signal_emit_by_name() is used to emit signals on ClutterContainer when
actors are removed or added. It happens to do various interface lookups
which are a bit unneccessary and can allocate memory.
Simply using emission wrappers makes all of that go away.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/1083
On x11 we emulate pointer events from touch events as long as there's
only one touchpoint on screen, this obviously leads to x11 sending us
crossing events triggered by the emulated pointer. Now if we get a leave
event and set the stage of the ClutterInputDevice to NULL, new touch
events will be discarded by clutters backend because the core pointer
doesn't have a stage associated. This means Mutter completely loses
state of a touchpoint as soon as it crosses a shell actor.
An easy reproducer for this issue is to start the four-finger-workspace
gesture above a window and to move the pointer emulating touch outside
of the window, this will freeze the gesture as the gesture no longer
receives touch events.
To fix this, stop tracking stage changes on crossing events and simply
leave the ClutterInputDevice stage as-is. In our case there is only one
stage anyway and that won't change in the future.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/423
Remove the rather useless callback function that's currently used for
handling the "visibility-changed" signal and instead connect to the
signal using `g_signal_connect_swapped()`.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/1077
Add API to ClutterSeat that allows inhibiting the unsetting of the
pointer focus surface. This can be useful for drawing custom cursor
textures like the magnifier of gnome-shell does.
In the future this API should also control unsetting of Clutters
focus-actor, not just the focus surface, that's not really needed right
now since we never unset the focus-actor anyway.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/1077
The check-alive feature is there for the user to be able to terminate
frozen applications more easily. However, sometimes applications are
implemented in a way where they fail to be reply to ping requests in a
timely manner, resulting in that, to the compositor, they are
indistinguishable from clients that have frozen indefinitely.
When using an application that has these issues, the GUI showed in
response to the failure to respond to ping requests can become annoying,
as it disrupts the visual presentation of the application.
To allow users to work-around these issues, add a setting allowing them
to configure the timeout waited until an application is considered
frozen, or disabling the check completely.
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/merge_requests/1080