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.
- Add POSIX 1993.09 compliance macro in source files that use
"struct timespec";
- Add POSIX 2001.12 compliance macro in source files that use
"struct sigaction" and the SA_SIGINFO macro, or the fchmod()
function;
- Add POSIX 2008.09 compliance macro in source files that use the
getline() function.
These compliance macros are enough for wlroots to compile with the
git-master version of uClibc-ng.
Signed-off-by: Paul Cercueil <paul@crapouillou.net>
Some opaque pixel formats (nv12, p010) require per-plane bytes_per_block
info. However, it doesn't make sense to store them in
wlr_pixel_format_info, as they will never be useful (currently, this
info is used for shm, which doesn't have a concept of multi-planar
buffers.)
Let's define a separate array and function for determining whether a
pixel format has alpha.
These comments were a bit misleading:
- "GL_TEXTURE_2D == mutable": not really, imported non-external-only
DMA-BUFs would also use this target, but are not mutable.
- "Only affects target == GL_TEXTURE_2D": same here.
- "If imported from a wlr_buffer": not really, would be NULL if
imported from a shm wlr_buffer.
Adjust these comments to better reflect reality and adjust the check
in gles2_texture_update_from_buffer().
We can double import a dmabuf if we use it as a texture target and
a render target. Instead, let's unify render targets and texture dmabuf
imports to use wlr_gles2_buffer which manages the EGLImageKHR
Some formats like sub-sampled YCbCr use a block of bytes to
store the color values for more than one pixel. Update our format
table to be able to handle such formats.
We'll use this function from wlr_shm too.
Add some assertions, use int32_t (since the wire protocol uses that,
and we don't want to use 16-bit integers on exotic systems) and
switch the stride check to be overflow-safe.
This lets the renderer handle the wlr_buffer directly, just like it
does in texture_from_buffer. This also allows the renderer to batch
the rectangle updates, and update more than the damage region if
desirable (e.g. too many rects), so can be more efficient.
Whether a texture is opaque or not doesn't depend on the renderer
at all, it just depends on the source buffer. Instead of forcing
all renderers to implement wlr_texture_impl.is_opaque, let's move
this in common code and use the wlr_buffer format to know whether
a texture will be opaque.
These formats require EXT_texture_norm16, which in turn needs OpenGL
ES 3.1. The EXT_texture_norm16 extension does not support passing
gl_internalformat = GL_RGBA to glTexImage2D, as can be done for
formats available in OpenGL ES 2.0, so this commit adds a field to
wlr_gles2_pixel_format to provide a more specific internalformat
parameter to glTexImage2D.
They are never used in practice, which makes all of our flag
handling effectively dead code. Also, APIs such as KMS don't
provide a good way to deal with the flags. Let's just fail the
DMA-BUF import when clients provide flags.
This allows callers to specify the operations they'll perform on
the returned data pointer. The motivations for this are:
- The upcoming Linux MAP_NOSIGBUS flag may only be usable on
read-only mappings.
- gbm_bo_map with GBM_BO_TRANSFER_READ hurts performance.
The wlr_egl functions are mostly used internally by the GLES2
renderer. Let's reduce our API surface a bit by hiding them. If
there are good use-cases for one of these, we can always make them
public again.
The functions mutating the current EGL context are not made private
because e.g. Wayfire uses them.
When importing a DMA-BUF wlr_buffer as a wlr_texture, the GLES2
renderer caches the result, in case the buffer is used for texturing
again in the future. When the wlr_texture is destroyed by the caller,
the wlr_buffer is unref'ed, but the wlr_gles2_texture is kept around.
This is fine because wlr_gles2_texture listens for wlr_buffer's destroy
event to avoid any use-after-free.
However, with this logic wlr_texture_destroy doesn't "really" destroy
the wlr_gles2_texture. It just decrements the wlr_buffer ref'count.
Each wlr_texture_destroy call must have a matching prior
wlr_texture_create_from_buffer call or the ref'counting will go south.
Wehn destroying the renderer, we don't want to decrement any wlr_buffer
ref'count. Instead, we want to go through any cached wlr_gles2_texture
and destroy our GL state. So instead of calling wlr_texture_destroy, we
need to call our internal gles2_texture_destroy function.
Closes: https://github.com/swaywm/wlroots/issues/2941
Make it so wlr_gles2_texture is ref'counted (via wlr_buffer). This
is similar to wlr_gles2_buffer or wlr_drm_fb work.
When creating a wlr_texture from a wlr_buffer, first check if we
already have a texture for the buffer. If so, increase the
wlr_buffer ref'count and make sure any changes made by an external
process are made visible (by invalidating the texture).
When destroying a wlr_texture created from a wlr_buffer, decrease
the ref'count, but keep the wlr_texture around in case the caller
uses it again. When the wlr_buffer is destroyed, cleanup the
wlr_texture.
The compositor shouldn't write to client buffers if the client
attaches a DMA-BUF to a wl_surface, then attaches a shm buffer.
Make gles2_texture_write_pixels return an error to prevent this
from happening.
Mesa provides YUV shaders, and can import multi-planar YUV DMA-BUFs
as a single EGLImage. Remove the arbitrary limitation.
If the driver doesn't support importing YUV as a single EGLImage,
the import will fail and the result will be the same anyways.
Clamping texture coordinates prevents OpenGL from blending the left and
right edge (or top and bottom edge) when scaling textures with GL_LINEAR
filtering. This prevents visual artifacts like swaywm/sway#5809.
Per discussion on IRC, this behaviour is made default. Compositors that want
the wrapping behaviour (e.g. for tiled patterns) can override this by doing:
struct wlr_gles2_texture_attribs attribs;
wlr_gles2_texture_get_attribs(texture, &attribs);
glBindTexture(attribs.target, attribs.tex);
glTexParameteri(attribs.target, GL_TEXTURE_WRAP_S, GL_REPEAT);
glTexParameteri(attribs.target, GL_TEXTURE_WRAP_T, GL_REPEAT);
glBindTexture(attribs.target, 0);
It can be surprising and unexpected that texture operations (such as
texture upload and import) change the current EGL context, especially
when it's done under-the-hood by wlroots in response to wl_surface
requests.
To prevent surprises, save and restore the previous EGL context.