This requires us to use GL_TRIANGLES and six verts per quad instead
of four, which makes me think it might not be worth it on
well-optimized GL drivers. However, from talking to some driver
developers about it, the GL_TRIANGLES should be faster, since this
means that there's one giant contiguous buffer instead of many small
buffers.
If we were really rendering a lot of quads, I'd use an element buffer
and GL_PRIMITIVE_RESTART, but we're really not ever rendering that
many quads, and the setup cost for that would just be too annoying.
It's unused. At the same time, rename "begin_paint_region" to
"begin_paint". This will help us clean up how GDK painting works
in the future to allow more creative use of double-buffering.
This is needed in the edge case where the X11 backend rounded the actual
size, and the GL flipping really needs the correct window height to
do proper Y coordinate flipping.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=739750
This is required for the X backend GL integration. If the
window has a height that is not a multiple of the window scale
we can't properly do the y coordinate flipping that GL needs.
Other backends can ignore this and use the default implementation.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=739750
Rather than just rounding down the position *and* the size separately
we correctly calculate a rectangle in scaled window coords that fully
covers the real window size. This really only makes a difference
when the window size/position isn't a multiple of the window scale.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=739750
Keep track of the exact size of X windows in underlying pixels; we
generally use the scaled size instead, but to properly handle the GL
viewport for windows that aren't a multiple of window_scale,
we need to know the real size.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=739750
Although we specify a resize increment to try and get a size that is
a multiple of the window scale, maximization typically wins
over the resize increment, so the window might be odd sized.
Round *up* in this case, rather than down, since it's better to
truncate a line or two at the bottom and right of the window rather
than have a line or two that we don't know what to do with.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=739750
The current way of exposing GDK API that should be considered internal
to GTK+ is to append a 'libgtk_only' suffix to the function name; this
is not really safe.
GLib has been using a slightly different approach: a private table of
function pointers, and a macro that allows accessing the desired symbol
inside that vtable.
We can copy the approach, and deprecate the 'libgtk_only' symbols in
lieu of outright removal.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=739781
Instead of possibly calling wl_surface_commit() out of
GdkFrameClock::after-paint, tick the transient parent clock so ::after-paint
can be eventually run.
This ensures that the subsurface coordinates (considered part of the state
of the parent) aren't committed untimely, and guaranteed to be orderly with
the wl_subsurface-relative state.
This is a gtk-side fix for https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=738887
cairo_region_copy(NULL) will effectively return an empty region, as this
function is always meant to return valid memory. This however inverts the
meaning of the NULL region and results in entirely non-clickable windows.
We need to export the symbols so they can be used in the
inspector, but we don't really want to make this supported
public API, so keep them out of installed headers.