Certain window managers give us a scale before it gives us a size.
This commit makes the Wayland backend avoid passing a zero size to
wp_viewport_set_source, which is a protocol error.
Currently, we scale the desktop up to the next largest integer, and rely on
the wayland compositor to scale it back down to the correct size.
This is obviously undesirable.
In this commit, we attempt to detect the actual fractional scaling by finding
the current active mode in wl_output, and dividing it by the logical screen
size reported by xdg_output, taking into consideration screen rotation.
We then use wp_viewporter to set the exact buffer and viewport sizes if
fractional scaling is needed.
This commit creates a new utility library, eglutil.h, which contains code
to detect and use EGL_KHR_swap_buffers_with_damage or its EXT equivalent.
This logic used to be duplicated between the X11 and Wayland display servers,
which is not ideal.
Instead of damaging the entire surface when rendering a cursor move,
we can use the EGL_KHR_swap_buffers_with_damage extension to only
damage the part of the window covered by the cursor. This should
reduce the cursor movement latency on Wayland.
We previously used strstr, which can be prone to false positives when
the name of one extension is a substring of another extension.
This commit creates the helper function util_hasGLExt, which asserts
that the substring found in extension list is bounded by either spaces
or the beginning/end of the string.
The Wayland display server is getting unwieldy due to the sheer size.
To make it easier to edit in the future, I split it into many components
based on logical boundaries.