Make it clear GLES2 is being used. Before this commit, various
GL-related information was printed, but not an easy-to-find line
about which renderer is being picked up.
This env var forces the creation of a specific renderer. If no renderer
is specified, the function will try to create all of the renderers one
by one until one is created successfuly.
It allocates in local main memory via shm_open, and provides a FD
to allow sharing with other processes.
This is suitable for software rendering under the Wayland and X11
backends.
The compositor shouldn't write to client buffers if the client
attaches a DMA-BUF to a wl_surface, then attaches a shm buffer.
Make gles2_texture_write_pixels return an error to prevent this
from happening.
The get_drm_fd was made available in an internal header with a53ab146f. Move it
now to the public header so consumers opting in to the unstable interfaces can
make use of it.
PRIME support for buffer sharing has become mandatory since the renderer
rewrite. Make sure we check for the appropriate capabilities in backend,
allocator and renderer.
See also #2819.
All backends use the GBM platform. We can't use it to figure out
whether the DRM backend is used anymore.
Let's just try to always request a high-priority EGL context. Failing
to do so is not fatal.
Split render/display setups have two separate devices: one display-only
with a primary node, and one render-only with a render node. However
in these cases the EGL implementation and the Wayland compositor will
advertise the display device instead of the render device [1]. The EGL
implementation will magically open the render device when the display
device is passed in.
So just pass the display device as if it were a render device. Maybe in
the future Mesa will advertise the render device instead and we'll be
able to remove this workaround.
[1]: https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/mesa/mesa/-/issues/4178
Compute only the transform matrix in the output. The projection matrix
will be calculated inside the gles2 renderer when we start rendering.
The goal is to help the pixman rendering process.
Mesa provides YUV shaders, and can import multi-planar YUV DMA-BUFs
as a single EGLImage. Remove the arbitrary limitation.
If the driver doesn't support importing YUV as a single EGLImage,
the import will fail and the result will be the same anyways.
Clamping texture coordinates prevents OpenGL from blending the left and
right edge (or top and bottom edge) when scaling textures with GL_LINEAR
filtering. This prevents visual artifacts like swaywm/sway#5809.
Per discussion on IRC, this behaviour is made default. Compositors that want
the wrapping behaviour (e.g. for tiled patterns) can override this by doing:
struct wlr_gles2_texture_attribs attribs;
wlr_gles2_texture_get_attribs(texture, &attribs);
glBindTexture(attribs.target, attribs.tex);
glTexParameteri(attribs.target, GL_TEXTURE_WRAP_S, GL_REPEAT);
glTexParameteri(attribs.target, GL_TEXTURE_WRAP_T, GL_REPEAT);
glBindTexture(attribs.target, 0);
As surfaces are no longer going to be used for wlr_egl, I may as well just go and add this check as it is needed for safety whenever surface-less rendering is being used.
The creation of `wlr_egl` will fail is the device extension
EGL_MESA_device_software is defined. The creation process is allowed to
continue only if the environment variable `WLR_RENDERER_ALLOW_SOFTWARE`
is defined to the value 1.
When gbm_bo_create is used and the GBM implementation does support
modifiers, gbm_bo_get_modifier may return something other than
DRM_FORMAT_MOD_INVALID. This can cause issues with the rest of the
stack (e.g. EGL or KMS) in case these don't support modifiers.
Instead, force the modifier to INVALID, to make sure no one uses
modifiers.