There is a suppression interval (0.25 seconds by default) after a call
to CGWarpMouseCursorPosition, during which local hardware events
(keyboard and mouse) are ignored. GLFW already calls
CGEventSourceSetLocalEventsSuppressionInterval with a value of 0.0, but
it doesn't help in this case, there is still a short delay before the
cursor can be moved. Moving the CGAssociateMouseAndMouseCursorPosition
call after the cursor position has been restored, fixes the issue.
Closes#1962
(cherry picked from commit 157ebb80aa)
The Wayland protocol spec[1] states that set_cursor must be called
with the serial number of the enter event. However, GLFW is passing in
the serial number of the latest received event, which does not meet the
protocol spec.
[1] https://wayland.freedesktop.org/docs/html/apa.html#protocol-spec-wl_pointer
As a result, set_cursor calls were simply ignored by the compositor.
This fix complies with the protocol more closely by specifically caching
the enter event serial, and using it for all set_cursor calls.
Fixes#1706Closes#1899
(cherry picked from commit e7758c506d)
This adds compile-time support for multiple platforms and runtime
detection of them. Window system related platform functions are now
called from shared code via the function pointer struct _GLFWplatform.
The timer, thread and module loading platform functions are still called
directly by name and the implementation chosen at link-time. These
functions are the same for any backend on a given OS, including the Null
backend.
The platforms are now enabled via CMake dependent options following the
GLFW_BUILD_<platform> pattern instead of a mix of automagic and ad-hoc
option names. There is no longer any option for the Null backend as it
is now always enabled.
Much of the struct stitching work in platform.h was based on an earlier
experimental branch for runtime platform selection by @ronchaine.
Every platform function related to windows, contexts, monitors, input,
event processing and Vulkan have been renamed so that multiple sets of
them can exist without colliding. Calls to these are now routed through
the _glfw.platform struct member. These changes makes up most of this
commit.
For Wayland and X11 the client library loading and display creation is
used to detect a running compositor/server. The XDG_SESSION_TYPE
environment variable is ignored for now, as X11 is still by far the more
complete implementation.
Closes#1655Closes#1958
The performance counter API is guaranteed to succeed on Windows XP and
later so there is no need for a fallback.
This removes our last dependency on winmm.
These headers come from when GLFW only supported a single context
creation API at a time, chosen at compile-time.
Since EGL and OSMesa are now always enabled and the platform-specific
APIs are tied to their specific window system, there is no reason to
keep these declarations separate from the internal.h and *_platform.h
header files.
This is done in preparation for runtime platform selection, to make sure
every platform can build with EGL enabled.
It may be possible to add support for things like the ANGLE null
platform later.
The native access functions for context handles did not verify that the
context had been created with the same API the function was for.
This makes these functions emit GLFW_NO_WINDOW_CONTEXT on API mismatch.
When the Vulkan loader is present but there are no required surface
extensions, as will for example happen with the Null platform, glfwinfo
caused an error in glfwGetPhysicalDevicePresentationSupport and produced
confusing output.
There is a suppression interval (0.25 seconds by default) after a call
to CGWarpMouseCursorPosition, during which local hardware events
(keyboard and mouse) are ignored. GLFW already calls
CGEventSourceSetLocalEventsSuppressionInterval with a value of 0.0, but
it doesn't help in this case, there is still a short delay before the
cursor can be moved. Moving the CGAssociateMouseAndMouseCursorPosition
call after the cursor position has been restored, fixes the issue.
Closes#1962
The Wayland protocol spec[1] states that set_cursor must be called
with the serial number of the enter event. However, GLFW is passing in
the serial number of the latest received event, which does not meet the
protocol spec.
[1] https://wayland.freedesktop.org/docs/html/apa.html#protocol-spec-wl_pointer
As a result, set_cursor calls were simply ignored by the compositor.
This fix complies with the protocol more closely by specifically caching
the enter event serial, and using it for all set_cursor calls.
Fixes#1706Closes#1899
According to the libxkbcommon documentation[1], xkb_keymap_key_repeats
requires keymap and keycode as input:
int xkb_keymap_key_repeats( struct xkb_keymap * keymap,
xkb_keycode_t key)
However, in inputChar in wl_input.c we are passing in xkb_keysym_t,
which was a type mismatch.
This results in some keys not repeating when they should and vice versa.
[1] https://xkbcommon.org/doc/current/group__components.html#ga9d7f998efeca98b3afc7c257bbac90a8Closes#1908.
(cherry picked from commit 216d5e8402)
According to the libxkbcommon documentation[1], xkb_keymap_key_repeats
requires keymap and keycode as input:
int xkb_keymap_key_repeats( struct xkb_keymap * keymap,
xkb_keycode_t key)
However, in inputChar in wl_input.c we are passing in xkb_keysym_t,
which was a type mismatch.
This results in some keys not repeating when they should and vice versa.
[1] https://xkbcommon.org/doc/current/group__components.html#ga9d7f998efeca98b3afc7c257bbac90a8Closes#1908.
Variables in CMake if-statements (and only in if-statements) do not need
to be explicitly dereferenced; a thing I did not always know.
(cherry picked from commit daed5edd6e)
The _glfwPlatformSetWindowFloating function would return without freeing
the state array if the window was already in the requested state.
(cherry picked from commit 071d7c0f46)
The outer glfwUpdateGamepadMappings function is now bypassed when
parsing the default gamepad mappings. The data in mappings.h does not
contain any comments or line breaks. Also this is done before joystick
support has been initialized, so there is no need to look for matching
devices.
Finally, the array of default mappings is pre-allocated. This has no
measurable performance impact but does generate a lot of calls, which
won't be nice for a user provided custom allocator to deal with.
(cherry picked from commit 201400b974)
This updates to a newer version of glad2 and switches to the header-only
variant.
This also (finally) switches to the newer glad2 loader signature that
allows us to pass in glfwGetInstanceProcAddress directly.