This function takes a pointer to memory with a hardcoded format
and many parameters to describe the pixel buffer.
wlr_output_cursor_set_buffer() can be used instead.
Based on five calls:
wlr_render_timer_create - creates a timer which can be reused across
frames on the same renderer
wlr_renderer_begin_buffer_pass - now takes a timer so that backends can
record when the rendering starts and finishes
wlr_render_timer_get_time - should be called as late as possible so that
queries can make their way back from the GPU
wlr_render_timer_destroy - self-explanatory
The timer is exposed as an opaque `struct wlr_render_timer` so that
backends can store whatever they want in there.
Many issues here:
- wlr_output_cursor_set_buffer() takes a buffer already scaled for
the output, not a buffer with scale=1.
- wlr_output_cursor.{width,height,hotspot_x,hotspot_y} are in output
buffer coordinates.
- render_cursor_buffer() had hardcoded no-ops for scale and
transform, instead of using the cursor surface's.
Fixes: b64e7e88bf ("output: add output_cursor_set_texture()")
The Wayland, X11 and headless backends don't really care about the
cursor size. We were picking a size identical to the texture size
in that case. This is incorrect for LoDPI cursor textures on HiDPI
outputs: in that case, we need to scale up the cursor texture.
Fixes the cursor being chopped off under the Wayland backend with
scale > 1.
We've had this struct for a while. It'd be useful for compositors
if they want to manage the swap chains themselves instead of being
forced to use wlr_output's. Some compositors might also want to use
a swapchain without an output.
The previous wlr_output_cursor_set_image() allows setting a NULL buffer for the
cursor to hide it. This functionality was used by sway to hide the cursor,
restore the original semantics by allowing NULL buffers again by avoiding the
wlr_buffer allocation in case we have NULL pixels and handing a NULL wlr_buffer
to wlr_output_cursor_set_buffer().
Sometimes we were calling wlr_output_impl.set_cursor with a NULL
buffer, but we weren't clearing wlr_output.cursor_front_buffer.
Avoid leaving a dangling buffer behind.
Introduce a helper function output_set_hardware_cursor which calls
wlr_output_impl.set_cursor and keeps cursor_front_buffer in sync.
All graphics drivers supporting cursor planes support ARGB8888,
the default cursor format, so this fallback is almost certainly
unused.
Essentially all cursor themes use alpha transparency to make it
clearer where relative to the screen content the cursor hotspot is.
It is better to fall back to a slightly slower software cursor than
it is to fall back to the opaque square that is a hardware cursor
without an alpha channel.
This makes it possible for the two functions using output_pick_format
(output_pick_cursor_format and output_create_swapchain) to select
different buffer formats.
This organizes the wlr_output implementation into separate files.
This avoids having a single mega-file with lots of unrelated parts
and makes it more obvious what the interactions between all the
parts are.
No functional changes, just moving code around.