This was missed when splitting up wayland.c into multiple modules.
This commit also drops the useless #include <SDL2/SDL.h>, bringing
SDL removal one step closer.
If the scale factor of an wl_output changes while the client is running,
the maximum scale factor is not updated. This may result in incorrect
scaling.
Therefore, when the scale factor is changed, we should generate a
resize event.
During the refactor/rebase period with B3-next the conditional was
accidentally reversed. This would cause the cursor to be ungrabbed
simply when toggling capture mode instead of waiting for the cursor to
exit the window.
Mouse move deltas greater then 10 are rare, let alone the 20 this code
now uses. Any movements that exceed 20 pixels will disable the exit
detection code path preventing rapid movements in FPV games from causing
the cursor to exit the window if autoCapture is enabled.
As we now are using our own backends instead of SDL, there is no longer
any need to warp back to the center of the window when in autoCapture
mode. This breaks the SDL ds backend behaviour, however as SDL is
planned to be removed this is not an issue.
The $escape+S keybinding now cycles through the available scale algorithms.
This allows the user to switch between algorithms if the automatic detection
turns out to be problematic.
The algorithms are renumbered so that 0 can be LG_SCALE_AUTO.
Reusing cached EGLImages while the frame format has changed will result
in visual artifacts. We should instead destroy the EGLImages and let
them be recreated.
Instead of duplicating the #defines from the shader into the C code,
this commit adds a custom CMake rule that exports all the #defines
from a shader into a C header.
This commit fixes the issues with the meaning of useNearest being flipped
by removing the variable and use enumerations.
We define an enumeration EGL_DesktopScaleType to express the type of scaling
needed to be performed: no scaling, upscaling, or downscaling. This is
updated when either the frame size or the viewport size changes.
Previously, we only updated the useNearest when the frame size changes.
The desktop shader can now support an enumeration of scaling algorithms,
although only nearest and linear are currently implemented.
Like before, nearest is used when not scaling or upscaling, and linear is
used when downscaling.
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.
This is enabled on default. Specify wayland:warpSupport=no to disable it,
which may be useful on certain compositors that do not warp when the
pointer is confined.
This commit implements support for LG_DS_WARP_SURFACE, as well as a warp
routine based on cursor confines.
This may not necessarily work for all compositors. As such, the old cursor
routines are still kept, and used when wm.warpSupport is set to false.
This commit converts the output of ds->getProp(LG_DS_WARP_SUPPORT) to
an enum containing three items:
* LG_DS_WARP_NONE: warp is not supported at all
* LG_DS_WARP_SURFACE: warp is possible, but only inside the window
* LG_DS_WARP_SCREEN: warp is possible anywhere on the screen
LG_DS_WARP_NONE corresponds to the old false return value, and
LG_DS_WARP_SCREEN corresponds to the old true return value.
LG_DS_WARP_SURFACE is designed for Wayland, where warping is possible,
but only in our window. In this case, since we cannot warp outside
the window, we can warp the cursor to the edge when we attempt to exit.
If the cursor leaves, the normal leave routine gets called, and the
cursor disappears. If the cursor does not end up leaving, we grab it
again.
This makes dealing with window manager shortcuts that overlap with guest
keys more pleasant, while retaining the previous functionality for users
who prefer it.
For instance, previously, using Alt+Tab (or $mod as Alt in i3/sway
movement commands) would result in the guest retaining Alt as pressed.
When the guest regained focus, it would continue thinking Alt is
pressed, leading to accidentally triggering obscure shortcuts. One had
to remember to press Alt again to "unstick" things, which was
suboptimal.
This commit forces the DMA'd memory to be copied into the texture in
the EGL on_frame handler. This avoids tearing when the LG host inevitably
updates the underlying memory. We need an additional copy inside the GPU,
but this is cheap compared to copying from system memory.
We could have used logic to lock the memory buffer, but that would require
performing DMA on every frame, which wastes memory bandwidth. This
manifests as reduced frame rate when moving the mouse compared to the
non-DMA implementation.
We also keep multiple EGLImages, one for each DMA fd, to avoid issues
with the OpenGL driver.
This new implementation uses a special mimetype to tag data copied from
the guest, instead of using flags. This should make it easier to
implement asynchronous transfers in the future. Also, it's simpler to
understand and less error-prone.
The pid is included in the mimetype in order to distinguish between
different instances of looking glass: you might want to copy between
two different VMs, for example.
This commit adds a new option, win:autoScreensaver, which when set to yes,
automatically disables the screensaver when requested by an application
running in the guest, and enables it when the application no longer wants
it disabled.
This is useful when doing media playback in the guest.
It appears that the keyboard should only be grabbed if the client is
focused and the cursor is in the view. However, the relevant logic was
missing from core_setCursorInView, and the keyboard was never actually
grabbed.
This commit adds the call to g_state.ds->grabKeyboard(), allowing grabbing
to work.
Before, if you want to see the FPS, you need to close the client and
restart it with the -k switch to see the FPS. This is annoying.
This PR introduces a new keybind, ScrollLock+D, which, when pressed,
toggles the display of the FPS.
This is implemented for both EGL and OpenGL backends.
egl_help_set_text and egl_help_render were both accessing bmp->help from
different threads. This creates a race condition in which if the help text
is quickly toggled on and off, it stays on.
This has been fixed with an atomic exchange.
This should prevent the looking-glass-client window from having an alpha
channel. On Wayland, the alpha channel is used to compose the window onto
the desktop, so the wallpaper would bleed through unless set to complete
opaque.
We worked around this by using constant alpha for rendering, but it was
not sustainable. Instead, we should just ask for 24-bit context.