Detect NULL commits before the surface is actually committed, allowing
the surface to be properly damaged on unmap.
(cherry picked from commit 5091118bed82394de5a151d658e895bb44059b61)
This commit renames map/unmap listeners to clarify that they handle
subsurface events, and ensures the node is always destroyed before
the subsurface.
Without this patch, wl_list_remove() would operate on listener links in
already freed memory. glibc is usually lenient to bugs like this, but
musl isn't.
(cherry picked from commit 83ab5055fd36bd0f8a0106257e45d8ed303636d8)
Some clients (e.g. mpv, Firefox) request a new wl_surface.frame
callback without damaging their surface. When this happens,
schedule a new output frame.
Closes: https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/wlroots/wlroots/-/issues/3350
(cherry picked from commit 812951f5bc47f502429406e49f4e24f377b7799b)
Allows the compositor to submit tokens to the pool of
currently active tokens. This can be useful when the
launcher doesn't use or support xdg-activation-v1 by
itself - e.g. when it is X11 based or use gtk_shell1.
This doesn't work if scene outputs are not used as the primary output of
scene surfaces will always be NULL.
Therefore, take a wlr_scene_output instead of separate wlr_scene and
wlr_output arguments and rename the function to
wlr_scene_output_send_frame_done().
The actual behavior of the function is unchanged.
This allows compositors to avoid sending multiple frame done events
to a surface that is rendered on multiple outputs at once. This may
also be used in the same way for presentation feedback.
wlroots picks names for all outputs, but it might be desirable for
compositor to override it.
For instance, Sway will use a headless output as a fallback in
case no outputs are connected. Sway wants to clearly label the
fallback output as such and label "real" headless outputs starting
from HEADLESS-1.
Implement a basic version of linux-dmabuf-unstable-v1 version 4.
Only default hints are implemented.
The new wlr_linux_dmabuf_feedback_v1 data structure will allow
compositors to define their own custom hints in the future. This
data structure makes it easy to describe feedback metadata.
It's converted to a "compiled" form suitable for marshalling over
the Wayland socket via feedback_compile.
This allows output commit listeners to access the newly committed
buffer. Currently wlr_output.front_buffer is used but it'll get
removed in the next commit.
DRM formats with an empty modifier list are invalid. Instead of
emptying the list, reduce it to { INVALID }.
Add a check to make sure the renderer and backend support implicit
modifiers, so that we don't fallback on e.g. Vulkan.
Closes: https://github.com/swaywm/sway/issues/6692
This allows getting a wlr_scene_output from a wlr_output. Since an
output can only be added once to a scene-graph there's no ambiguity.
This is useful for compositors using wlr_scene_attach_output_layout:
the output layout integration automatically creates a scene-graph
output for each wlr_output added to the layout.
This allows compositors to get primary formats without manually
calling wlr_output_impl.get_primary_formats.
For example, the Sway patch for linux-dmabuf feedback [1] needs
this.
[1]: https://github.com/swaywm/sway/pull/6313
Sometimes we were calling wlr_output_impl.set_cursor with a NULL
buffer, but we weren't clearing wlr_output.cursor_front_buffer.
Avoid leaving a dangling buffer behind.
Introduce a helper function output_set_hardware_cursor which calls
wlr_output_impl.set_cursor and keeps cursor_front_buffer in sync.
The implicit check to filter out LINEAR for dmabuf checked for INVALID
twice instead of checking for INVALID & LINEAR. Fix this.
Fixes: d37eb5c2ea ("linux-dmabuf-v1: filter out LINEAR if implicit")
Reported-by: Dawid Czeluśniak <czelusniakdawid@gmail.com>
If only INVALID and LINEAR are valid modifiers, we need to filter out
LINEAR since Xwayland won't be able to allocate a BO with the explicit
linear modifier on hardware that does not support explicit modifiers.
The addition of LINEAR is an internal implementation detail which
simplifies the wlroots architecture for now.
Evntually Xwayland should be fixed to filter out modifiers that are not
supported by the GBM implementation, see [1]. This could be done by
querying EGL for the supported modifiers.
[1]: https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/xorg/xserver/-/issues/1166
This allows compositors to easily add an xdg_surface to the
scene-graph while retaining the ability to unconstraint popups
and decide their final position.
Compositors can handle new popups with the wlr_xdg_shell.new_surface
event, get the parent scene-graph node via wlr_xdg_popup.parent.data,
create a new scene-graph node via wlr_scene_xdg_surface_tree_create,
and unconstraint the popup if they want to.
The parameters are used when the client is in the process of
building a buffer. There's no reason why this internal
implementation detail should be exposed in our public header.
All graphics drivers supporting cursor planes support ARGB8888,
the default cursor format, so this fallback is almost certainly
unused.
Essentially all cursor themes use alpha transparency to make it
clearer where relative to the screen content the cursor hotspot is.
It is better to fall back to a slightly slower software cursor than
it is to fall back to the opaque square that is a hardware cursor
without an alpha channel.
This change introduces new double buffered state to the wlr_output,
corresponding to the buffer format to render to.
The format being rendered to does not control the bit depth of colors
being sent to the display; it does generally determine the format with
which screenshot data is provided. The DRM backend _may_ sent higher
bit depths if the render format depth is increased, but hardware and
other limitations may apply.
Most (and possibly all) compositors using wlroots only ever render
fully opaque content. To provide better performance, this change
switches the default format used by wlr_output buffers from
ARGB8888 to the opaque XRGB8888.
Compositors like mutter, kwin, and weston already default to
XRGB8888, so this change is unlikely to expose any new bugs in
underlying drivers and hardware.
This does not affect the hardware cursor's buffer format, which is
still ARGB8888 by default.
As part of this change, the X11 backend (which does not support
changing format at runtime) now picks a true color, 24 bit depth
visual (i.e. XRGB8888) instead of a 32 bit depth (ARGB8888) one.
This makes it possible for the two functions using output_pick_format
(output_pick_cursor_format and output_create_swapchain) to select
different buffer formats.
The backend and renderer don't directly interact together, so there's
no point in checking that their buffer caps intersect. What we want to
check is that:
- The backend and allocator buffer caps are compatible, because the
backend consumes buffers to display them.
- The renderer and allocator buffer caps are compatible, because the
renderer imports buffers to sample them or render to them.
For instance, when running with the DRM backend and the Pixman renderer,
the (backend & renderer) check will fail because backend = DMABUF and
renderer = DATA_PTR.