If the commit fails, then our local state becomes out-of-sync with
the kernel's. Additionally, when disabling a connector without going
through dealloc_crtc(), conn->crtc would still be set.
Fix this by updating conn->crtc in drm_connector_commit_state().
The raw enum value wasn't informative enough. It's not trivial to
tell whether 0 means connected or disconnected.
Drop the status from the state after realloc, since the exact same
information is printed right above.
Some formats like YUV are only supported by Mesa for sampling, not
for rendering. However we always unconditionally added the INVALID
modifier to the list of render formats.
Check whether all modifiers are external-only, in that case, don't
add INVALID to the list of render formats.
The dep allows us to check dep variables to discover supported
features. With the binary we assume none of the features are
supported. If a user forgets to install the pkg-config file (e.g.
because it's in a split package) we end up incorrectly disabling
all features. Instead let's error out.
Instead of having a pending_fb field on the struct wlr_drm_plane,
move it to struct wlr_drm_connector_state. That way, there's no
risk having a stale pending FB around: the state doesn't survive
across tests and commits.
The cursor is a special case because it's disconnected from the
atomic state: the wlr_backend_impl.set_cursor hook sets the cursor
for the next commit. Move the field to
wlr_drm_connector.cursor_pending_fb.
We'll move the pending primary FB into the connector state in the
next commit, dropping wlr_drm_plane.pending_fb in the process.
Introduce a dedicated field for the cursor, which has to be managed
in a special way due to our set_cursor API.
We were calling drm_connector_supports_vrr() before
drm_connector_alloc_crtc(). Thus, when an output is currently off,
the VRR test would always fail, because it checks that the
vrr_enabled CRTC prop exists.
This avoids re-building the whole project when switching one
Meson option. This shrinks down the compiler invocation command
line, making it more readable and making it easier to inspect
which flags are passed in (the generated file can be opened).
Additionally this is more consistent with our external feature
handling, which uses <wlr/config.h> already.
destroy_wl_buffer() is called from backend_destroy(). We need to
ensure the wlr_buffer is unlocked when we're waiting for a
wl_buffer.release event from the parent compositor.
The Vulkan spec doesn't guarantee that the driver will wait for
implicitly synchronized client buffers before texturing from them.
radv happens to perform the wait, but anv doesn't.
Fix this by extracting implicit fences from DMA-BUFs, importing
them into Vulkan as a VkSemaphore objects, and make the render pass
wait on these VkSemaphores.
wlroots uses "// private state" comments to denote structure fields
which shouldn't be accessed by compositors, so let's drop
wlr_output_layout_output_state and inline its fields into
wlr_output_layout_output; this also simplifies layout output creation.
Rename xwm_map_shell_surface() to xwayland_surface_associate().
This function doesn't actually "map" the surface in Wayland
parlance, the wl_surface may not have a buffer attached yet.
pre_cb was an alias for stage_cb->vk. Let's just use a single
variable instead.
Additionally, early return when vulkan_record_stage_cb() fails.
We were crashing in vkCmdPipelineBarrier() if that happened.
Skip clears with an empty scissor.
Fixes the following validation error:
00:00:09.734 [wlr] [render/vulkan/vulkan.c:61] Validation Error: [ VUID-vkCmdClearAttachments-rect-02682 ] Object 0: handle = 0x62600001b100, type = VK_OBJECT_TYPE_COMMAND_BUFFER; | MessageID = 0xadbd476f | CmdClearAttachments(): pRects[0].rect.extent.width is zero. The Vulkan spec states: The rect member of each element of pRects must have an extent.width greater than 0 (https://www.khronos.org/registry/vulkan/specs/1.3-extensions/html/vkspec.html#VUID-vkCmdClearAttachments-rect-02682) (VUID-vkCmdClearAttachments-rect-02682)
We were filling VkTimelineSemaphoreSubmitInfoKHR.pSignalSemaphoreValues,
but we were missing VkSubmitInfo.pSignalSemaphores.
This was causing VkTimelineSemaphoreSubmitInfoKHR.pSignalSemaphoreValues
to be ignored. By chance, the render command buffer was using the
next timeline point, so we were waiting for that instead.