Before calling wlr_output_impl.{test,commit}, perform a cheap
comparison between the current and candidate state. Unset any
fields which didn't change.
If the display is destroyed before wlr_global_destroy_safe's timer
fires, the struct destroy_global_data is leaked. This shouldn't cause
issues in practice because the timer will never fire, but makes it
harder to spot compositor memory leaks.
This refactors output_ensure_buffer() to not mutate the state passed,
making the previous subtle behavior much more explicit.
Fixes: d483dd2f ("output: add wlr_output_commit_state")
Closes: #3442
The EDID 1.4 spec says that the serial number is optional:
> If this field is not used, then enter “00h, 00h, 00h, 00h”.
Leave the wlr_output.serial field NULL in that case, and hide it
from the output description.
CTA-861-G says that "graphics" is used to indicate non-analog (ie,
digital) content. With that bit set, the sink should turn off analog
reconstruction and other related filtering.
Replace them with wlr_signal_emit_safe, which correctly handles
cases where a listener removes another listener.
Reported-by: Isaac Freund <ifreund@ifreund.xyz>
Some output commits (changing e.g. the output scale or transform)
don't require any change in the KMS state. Instead of going through
a KMS commit, return early. Blocking KMS commits can be expensive.
The wlr_output API requires compositors to wait for wlr_output.frame
before submitting a new buffer. However, compositors can perform a
commit which doesn't involve a buffer anytime.
If the commit is a modeset, we set DRM_MODE_ATOMIC_ALLOW_MODESET and
block until the commit is done. If it isn't, we currently always
perform a non-blocking commit. This is an issue because a previous
page-flip might still be in flight kernel-side, returning EBUSY.
Fix this by using blocking commits when a buffer isn't submitted by
the compositor.
Closes: https://github.com/swaywm/sway/issues/6962
References: https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/wlroots/wlroots/-/issues/2239
See the discussion at [1]: there's no easy way to fix libwayland-cursor
without a new API. Sending the error for other roles will prevent the
same client bug from appearing elsewhere.
[1]: https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/wayland/wayland/-/issues/194
This commit ensures that outputs that weren't created by the output
layout helper aren't destroyed on the output layout change.
Consider the following piece of logic:
// struct wlr_output *o1, *o2;
// struct wlr_scene *scene;
// struct wlr_output_layout *layout;
wlr_scene_attach_output_layout(scene, layout);
wlr_output_layout_add_auto(layout, o1);
struct wlr_scene_output *so2 = wlr_scene_output_create(scene, o2);
wlr_output_layout_move(layout, o1, 100, 200);
// so2 is invalid now
Since 5e0ef70cc0 ("seat: Create inert objects for missing capabilities")
wlroots can create inert seat objects when the capability is currently missing
for the client but it had the capablity before. The client hoever will happily
handover the wl_pointer resource to the relative_pointer implementation,
creating a NULL pointer dereference when trying to access the seat_client which
is set to NULL for inert objects.
Since the protocol does not contain an error for such requests, we hand out an
relative_pointer handle with the seat set to NULL.
We also need to check whether there is an associated seat in
send_relative_motion and need to tweak the destroy notifier in case no seat is
available.
This way we can hand out a valid relative_pointer resource and don't crash the
compositor when trying to access an inert seat pointer resource in
relative_pointer.
Relevant WAYLAND_DEBUG=1 when testing a client and switching VT every second:
[2619872.442] wl_seat@30.capabilities(3)
[2619872.460] -> wl_seat@30.get_pointer(new id wl_pointer@36)
[2619872.484] wl_data_device@25.selection(nil)
[2619872.504] zwp_primary_selection_device_v1@26.selection(nil)
[2619874.995] wl_seat@12.capabilities(3)
[2619875.035] -> wl_compositor@5.create_surface(new id wl_surface@37)
[2619875.088] -> wl_seat@12.get_pointer(new id wl_pointer@29)
[2619875.105] -> zwp_relative_pointer_manager_v1@8.get_relative_pointer(new id zwp_relative_pointer_v1@27, wl_pointer@29)
[2619875.127] -> wl_compositor@5.create_surface(new id wl_surface@35)
[2619875.139] -> wl_seat@12.get_pointer(new id wl_pointer@43)
[2619981.180] wl_seat@12.capabilities(2)
[2619981.214] -> zwp_relative_pointer_v1@27.destroy()
[2619981.226] -> wl_pointer@29.release()
[2619981.236] -> wl_surface@37.destroy()
[2619981.247] -> wl_pointer@43.release()
[2619981.254] -> wl_surface@35.destroy()
[2619981.262] wl_seat@12.capabilities(0)
[2619981.285] -> wl_keyboard@33.release()
[2619987.316] wl_seat@30.capabilities(2)
[2619987.336] -> wl_pointer@36.release()
[2619987.363] wl_seat@30.capabilities(0)
[2619987.371] -> wl_keyboard@34.release()
[2621932.880] wl_display@1.delete_id(41)
[2621932.903] wl_display@1.delete_id(40)
[2621932.910] wl_display@1.delete_id(27)
[2621932.917] wl_display@1.delete_id(29)
[2621932.924] wl_display@1.delete_id(37)
[2621932.930] wl_display@1.delete_id(43)
[2621932.944] wl_display@1.delete_id(35)
[2621932.950] wl_display@1.delete_id(33)
[2621932.959] wl_seat@12.capabilities(2)
[2621932.976] -> wl_seat@12.get_keyboard(new id wl_keyboard@33)
[2621936.875] wl_seat@12.capabilities(3)
[2621936.893] -> wl_compositor@5.create_surface(new id wl_surface@35)
[2621936.931] -> wl_seat@12.get_pointer(new id wl_pointer@43)
[2621936.945] -> zwp_relative_pointer_manager_v1@8.get_relative_pointer(new id zwp_relative_pointer_v1@37, wl_pointer@43)
[2621936.965] -> wl_compositor@5.create_surface(new id wl_surface@29)
[2621936.987] -> wl_seat@12.get_pointer(new id wl_pointer@27)
[2621942.796] wl_data_device@25.selection(nil)
[2621942.817] zwp_primary_selection_device_v1@26.selection(nil)
[2621942.823] wl_seat@30.capabilities(2)
Now that the DRM backend no longer depends on GBM, we can make it
optional. The GLES2 renderer still depends on it because of our EGL
device selection.
This is useful for compositors with their own renderers, and for
compositors using the Vulkan renderer.
The previous entries aren't used because the build files are
self-contained in the Meson build directory.
Add subprojects/ because it's common for developers to override
Meson dependencies via subproject symlinks.