When using jitRender, or on the first frame of an alert the window
doesn't get resized immediately causing it to cut off the end of the
text.
ImGui needs two passes to calulate the bounding box for automatically
sized windows, this is per it's design and not a bug, see:
https://github.com/ocornut/imgui/issues/2158#issuecomment-434223618
If the guest supports sending us it's UUID and PureSpice has also
reported the guest's UUID, check them to see if the user has
accidentially connected to the wrong spice socket.
This change allows the host to provide information to the client about
how the VM is configured, information such as the UUID, CPU
configuration and capture method both for informational display in the
client as well as debugging in the client's logs.
The format of the records allows this to be extended later with new
record types without needing to bump the KVMFR version.
g_state.posInfoValid could become valid after the guest reports the
cursor position, in which case we did not show the cursor until another
update occurs.
This commit eliminates the race by performing the update when
g_state.posInfoValid becomes true.
The cursorThread prevents the host from going to sleep when the
video feed is disabled as it's subscribed to the cursor queue. Stopping
the cursorThread will unsubscribe from the queue and allow the host
application to disable capture.
This prevents attempts to grab the pointer after the guest side warp
finishes if the pointer has left the window in the meantime. On Wayland,
this would result in the pointer moving to the middle of the window when
the confine is created.
Previously, all progress made during sleep is reset, so if the thread keeps
getting interrupted before the sleep finishes, the sleep will never complete.
The translucent white modal background sort of cancels out the dark
background we apply to the overlay, which is undesirable. It should
instead further darken the background.
For consistency, we now use igGetColorU32Col(ImGuiCol_ModalWindowDimBg)
to draw the overlay background, to avoid hardcoding the same colour in
multiple places.
Currently, this is visible through how fast the cursor blinks, with it
blinking faster at higher refresh rates. This commit makes the timing
consistent.
imgui really hates it when we update the modifier key state after igNewFrame.
The result is:
void ImGui::ErrorCheckEndFrameSanityChecks(): Assertion
`(key_mod_flags == 0 || g.IO.KeyMods == key_mod_flags) &&
"Mismatching io.KeyCtrl/io.KeyShift/io.KeyAlt/io.KeySuper vs io.KeyMods"'
failed.
Therefore, we buffer the modifier state information and update it in the IO
object right before we call igNewFrame.
This avoids warping the host cursor when the guest-side warp has not finished,
which will result in the host cursor exiting at the wrong position if it exits
at that moment.
Due to the way assert is defined in standard C, compilers in release mode
will not treat it as unreachable. This explains a lot about those pesky
uninitialized variable bugs, actually.
It looks really weird having a separator right after a sentence ending in :.
A separator makes the list look detached from the paragraph that introduces
it, which looks awkward. Instead, this commit moves the separator before the
introducing paragraph.
Also added logic to properly pluralize the sentence.
The display servers and renderers may want to register their own
overlays in the future, as such we need g_state.overlays to be
initialized to allow for this.
Since we only update imgui's cursor location when the overlay is
enabled, if the last cursor position was showing a shape that is
incorrect when we re-enter the overlay the cursor will be wrong. This
corrects this by updating the location as we enter overlay mode.
This adds a new `earlyInit` call which allows the overlay to register
options before actually being intialized. Also the keybind handling and
state tracking for each overlay has been moved internal to the overlay
itself.
When entering overlay mode if the cursor was previously grabbed we
should restore the state when exiting overlay mode. This will also
correct the pointer setting it to NONE or SQUARE depending on the prior
grab state.
X11 needs to calibrate to get the best possible latency, as such it
needs the scene to render so that the render time of the scene can be
accounted for in the delay calculation.
The way things were handled in EGLTexture is not only very hard to
follow, but broken. This change set breaks up EGLTexture into a modular
design making it easier to implement the various versions.
Note that DMABUF is currently broken and needs to be re-implemented.
Without configuring Wayland compositors to send frame callbacks as late as
possible, JIT rendering can increase latency by more than one frame.
For example, by default, sway asks applications to render right after a
vblank, and does its own composition right after a vblank, resulting in
~2 frame's worth of latency. If max_render_time is set on the output,
it composes that many milliseconds before the vblank, losing ~1 frame's
worth of latency. If max_render_time is set on the window also, the frame
callback is sent that many milliseconds before composition, and we achieve
perfectly low latency.
Therefore, out of the box, JIT rendering should not be enabled, as manual
compositor configuration is required for optimal results.
For reference, the following sway settings results in the best latency:
output <insert output name> max_render_time 1
for_window [app_id="looking-glass-client"] max_render_time 1
This reverts commit 3baed05728.
When requested, JIT render mode will be used if the display server supports it.
Otherwise, a warning is generated instead.
This essentially uses the signalNextFrame logic for imgui, but for everything.
We automatically enable this mode when overlay is on.
Currently, this exposes some damage tracking bugs in the EGL renderer.
We look for the client config in $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/looking-glass/client.ini.
This is done because it's more conventional, and also allows us to add
additional configuration files, e.g. for the host.
We fallback to $HOME/.config as is standard, and then as a last resort use
getpwuid(getuid())->pw_dir. This is also recommended by the getpwuid manpage:
> An application that wants to determine its user's home directory should
> inspect the value of HOME (rather than the value getpwuid(getuid())->pw_dir)
> since this allows the user to modify their notion of "the home directory"
> during a login session.
Currently, we load /etc/looking-glass-client.ini and/or
~/.config/looking-glass-client.ini as long as they exist, even if they are
not files. We should only load them if they are files.
We don't want to encourage craziness of people making the client suid to
bypass permission issues on the shm file.
Note: I see no evidence of this happening in the wild, but let's be
proactive.
The refresh-copyright script now automatically updates the copyright string
embedded in config.c. In order to achieve this, refresh-copyright gained the
ability to reflow text as the situation needs.
We now give ImGui the true logical size of the window and tell it to scale
the framebuffer. To fix the blurry fonts, we continue to load fonts at the
scale necessary for the DPI and use FontGlobalScale to shrink the fonts back
to the logical size. The font rectangle is then expanded by the framebuffer
scaling, resulting in good text rendering.
This method has the advantage of not messing up the sizes of resizable
overlays when moving across monitors.
The default of [0, 50] makes sense for FPS/UPS graphs, but does not for
things like the import graph. The latter should not take more than 5 ms
for sure.
This commit allows the min/max y-axis value to be specified when registering
the graph.
Now that we are drawing with damage rects, when the window is hidden and
then exposed the window may not get fully redrawn. This provides
`app_invalidateWindow` for the display server backend to call when the
screen needs a full redraw.
When a new client connects to our session the host will repeat the last
valid frame for the new client. This change will detect this and skip
the duplicated frame.
This is necessary in case overlays change size. When this happens, we must
damage the larger of the overlays' rectangles this frame and last frame.
This erases the overlay from where it is no longer appears.
In order to do this, we must keep track of the rectangles for every overlay
with no exception. We cannot short-circuit the generation of rectangles if
we run out of buffer space, and we must allocate space for MAX_OVERLAY_RECTS
rectangles for every frame. Otherwise, we will not know where to erase the
overlay if it disappears.
While the renderer can internally track this it would be better to
simply provide this information to the renderer directly so it can make
better decisions on how best to update the screen.