After disabling a connector, we need to cleanup the connector to
teardown the surfaces and unlock the FBs.
Move this logic into drm_connector_apply_commit() so that it's
applied when drm_commit() is called from somewhere else than
drm_connector_commit_state().
There is some duplicated logic between these two functions.
The commit codepath was calling the test function before doing the
real commit, so this also saves an unnecessary test-only commit
when performing a real commit.
This centralizes logic common for both the atomic and libliftoff
backends. Additionally, a struct will make it easier to implement
multi-connector commits (since it can be stored in an array).
In [1] we discovered a bug where wlr_drm_connector_state.primary_fb
would not be set up correctly because drm_connector_alloc_crtc() was
called after drm_connector_state_init(). This is tricky to discover,
so instead assert() that we have a usable CRTC by the time
drm_connector_state_init() is called.
[1]: https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/wlroots/wlroots/-/merge_requests/4569
Use the same logic for cursor FBs as we currently use for primary
FBs. This also fixes the same bug as [1] but in a different, more
robust way.
The new logic integrates better with atomic and will be required
anyways in the future when set_cursor will be superseded by a better
API.
[1]: https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/wlroots/wlroots/-/merge_requests/4577
With the following sequence of events, the cursor FB fields could
end up being all set to NULL while the cursor is enabled:
1. set_cursor is called, conn->cursor_pending_fb is set to a FB
pointer.
2. The output is committed with a buffer. crtc->cursor->queued_fb
is set to the FB pointer, conn->cursor_pending_fb is reset to
NULL. A page-flip event is expected in the future.
3. The output is committed with a modeset before the page-flip
event is triggered. crtc->cursor->queued_fb is reset to NULL.
At this point all of crtc->cursor->current_fb,
crtc->cursor->queued_fb and conn->cursor_pending_fb are NULL which
is a bogus state when the cursor plane is enabled.
To avoid this issue, avoid overwriting crtc->cursor->queued_fb
with a NULL pointer on commit. The cursor logic still isn't great,
but let's keep a rework of that for a separate patch.
Closes: https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/wlroots/wlroots/-/issues/3734
Only print the list of connectors once, with both the old and new
status. Use CRTC object IDs instead of CRTC indices. Make it obvious
when a connector keeps the same CRTC.
If a connector has no current/queued buffer, but has a pending
buffer in the commit, we need to process that pending buffer before
checking pending.primary_fb.
When turning off a CRTC, we don't need a buffer.
It doesn't matter whether this is a modeset or not: we always need
a buffer even for regular page-flips as long as a connector is
active.
Fixes: 374daeb256 ("backend/drm: Ensure a primary fb is available when configuring an output")
We can never hit the case where we try to light up an output without
a buffer. output_ensure_buffer() will catch this for now, and when that's
removed, output_basic_test() will catch this case.
drm_connect_state_init() will set primary_fd to null if no CRTC is active
for the connector and can crash later if the code expects a CRTC (like
when lighting up an output).
On startup, we fetch the previous MODE_ID blob ID so that
compositors can keep using the previous mode if they want to.
However, that blob doesn't belong to us, it belongs to the
previous DRM master. As a result, we get an error when trying to
destroy it.
Fix this by tracking whether the blob belongs to us or not.
Closes: https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/wlroots/wlroots/-/issues/3811
Stop trying to maintain a per-file _POSIX_C_SOURCE. Instead,
require POSIX.1-2008 globally. A lot of core source files depend
on that already.
Some care must be taken on a few select files where we need a bit
more than POSIX. Some files need XSI extensions (_XOPEN_SOURCE) and
some files need BSD extensions (_DEFAULT_SOURCE). In both cases,
these feature test macros imply _POSIX_C_SOURCE. Make sure to not
define both these macros and _POSIX_C_SOURCE explicitly to avoid
POSIX requirement conflicts (e.g. _POSIX_C_SOURCE says POSIX.1-2001
but _XOPEN_SOURCE says POSIX.1-2008).
Additionally, there is one special case in render/vulkan/vulkan.c.
That file needs major()/minor(), and these are system-specific.
On FreeBSD, _POSIX_C_SOURCE hides system-specific symbols so we need
to make sure it's not defined for this file. On Linux, we can
explicitly include <sys/sysmacros.h> and ensure that apart from
symbols defined there the file only uses POSIX toys.
If all connectors and planes already have the right CRTC set, or
are disabled, we can skip the device-wide reset after a VT switch.
I've contemplated using a more fine-grained logic to only reset
the connectors, CRTCs and planes that need to be migrated. However,
writing a correct algorithm for this would be quite involved, and it
doesn't seem worth the trouble anyways.
Closes: https://github.com/swaywm/sway/issues/7956
This function fetches property IDs. These don't change for the
lifetime of the connector. Instead of refreshing the property IDs
on hotplug (and leaving property IDs unset for disconnected
connectors), only fetch the property IDs when we create the
connector.
wlr_output.refresh is populated by core wlr_output, and thus will
be zero for a custom mode with an unset refresh rate.
Save the refresh rate from the drmModeModeInfo in wlr_drm_connector
instead.
Closes: https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/wlroots/wlroots/-/issues/3791
Introduce a per-page-flip tracking struct passed to the kernel
when we request a page-flip event for an atomic commit. The kernel
will pass us back this pointer when delivering the event.
This eliminates any risk of mixing up events together. In particular,
if two events are pending, or if the CRTC of a connector is swapped,
we no longer blow up in the page-flip event handler.
Closes: https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/wlroots/wlroots/-/issues/3753
Right now this is done "by chance" because we disable all CRTCs
on shutdown. However, we'll stop doing this. Plus, if disabling
a CRTC fails, we don't cleanup properly.