GLFW did not restore the previous Xlib error handler when removing its
own, instead resetting to the default handler.
This commit saves and restores the previous error handler.
None of this is thread-safe or could ever be.
Fixes#2108
The NetBSD sonames for X11 and related libraries is more stable than on
OpenBSD but the version numbers are still bumped more often than their
Linux counterparts, even excluding the one-time version bump across all
X11 related libraries.
This commit moves to using version-less sonames for X11 and related
libraries on NetBSD, which will hopefully be more forward-compatible
than hard-coding NetBSD-specific sonames.
This may not be the correct long-term solution but it runs now.
Binaries also appear to need an LD_LIBRARY_PATH or rpath entry of
/usr/X11R7/lib in order for the libraries to be found by dlopen.
Tested on NetBSD 9.2.
There is a seemingly unavoidable race condition when waiting for data on
the X11 display connection, as long as any other thread is also making
Xlib calls. The event data we are waiting for could be read by the
other thread as part of looking for the reply to its request, before our
poll has begun.
This commit replaces the X11 event sent by glfwPostEmptyEvent with
writing to an unnamed pipe. The race condition remains if other Xlib
calls are made on other threads, but glfwPostEmptyEvent should now be
race-free.
This commit is based on work by pcwalton, OlivierSohn, kovidgoyal and
joaodasilva.
Closes#2033
Related to #379
Related to #1281
Related to #1285
The OpenBSD ports tree assigns its own soname version numbers, so the
hardcoded sonames GLFW uses to load libraries on non-macOS Unices are
often incorrect. Instead OpenBSD recommends that run-time loading
should leave out the version numbers entirely. The OpenBSD ld.so then
finds the correct library.
This upstreams the ports tree fixes for Xcursor and EGL, and adds the
corresponding fix for all other run-time loaded library sonames.
Tested on OpenBSD 7.0.
This issue was initially reported on IRC.
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
This adds the glfwInitAllocator function for specifying a custom memory
allocator to use instead of the C runtime library.
The allocator is a struct of type GLFWallocator with fields
corresponding to malloc, realloc and free, while the internal API
corresponds to calloc, realloc and free.
Heap allocation calls are filtered before reaching the user-provided
functions, so deallocation of NULL and allocations of zero bytes are not
passed on, reallocating NULL is transformed into an allocation and
reallocating to size zero is transformed into deallocation.
The clearing of a new block to zero is performed by the internal
calloc-like function.
Closes#544.
Fixes#1628.
Closes#1947.
POSIX.1-2008 deprecated gettimeofday, which we used as a fallback if the
monotonic clock was unavailable.
This replaces that fallback with the non-monotonic real-time clock.
Because of the Gordian knot of feature test macros across Unices, this
also includes the shift from some platform source files defining
_POSIX_C_SOURCE to various values to _DEFAULT_SOURCE being defined for
all source files on Linux. This is because -std=c99 on Linux disables
_DEFAULT_SOURCE (POSIX 2008 and extensions).
Once runtime platform selection comes in, this kind of platform-specific
preprocessor logic can be moved into the platform glue files and won't
need to be replicated by third-party build setups, but for now, sorry.
This makes joystick support initialize the first time a joystick
function is called, including those gamepad functions that are layered
on top of joystick functions.
Related to #1284.
Related to #1646.
The client clip region was left in place when mouse passthrough was
disabled, leading to missing mouse input if the window grew beyond it.
Related to #1568.
This adds the GLFW_MOUSE_PASSTHROUGH window hint and attribute for
controlling whether mouse input passes through the window to whatever
window is behind it.
Fixes#1236.
Closes#1568.
It seems it has not been possible to compile GLFW on systems without the
UTF-8 extensions to Xlib since a0a5cc57df
was merged five months ago. The UTF-8 extension functions were
introduced with XFree86 4.0.2 in December 2000 and are likely widely
available at this point.
This removes the locale-dependent fallback paths and uses the UTF-8
extension functions where available.
A regression introduced by b889aa7841
broke the special handling of numpad keys for the non-XKB fallback path.
The non-functional remains were later removed. This restores the
original behavior.
This fixes the issue where function keys would be reported as
GLFW_KEY_UNKNOWN if XKB was available and one of the configured keyboard
layouts was Arabic.
This is only part of #1598, because the full patch removed parts of the
fallback path for when XKB is unavailable.
Closes#1598.
This adds support for the XIM instantiate and destroy callbacks, letting
GLFW detect both when the current input method disappears and when a new
one is started.
Tested with ibus.
CLOCK_MONOTONIC should not be used as a feature macro. The POSIX
feature macros are provided by unistd.h. CLOCK_MONOTONIC is provided by
time.h. CLOCK_MONOTONIC requires _POSIX_C_SOURCE >= 199309L on some
systems.
KDE sometimes removes the Xft.dpi resource when it would be set to the
X11 default value of 96, causing GLFW to fall back to a value calculated
from the core display sizes in pixels and mm in a desktop environment
that supports Xft.dpi.
This moves to a hardcoded fallback value of 96 on the assumption that
there are more people running KDE with 96 DPI than there are people
running desktop environments that do not support Xft.dpi.
All of this is terrible please send help.
Fixes#1578.
For users with multiple keyboard layouts configured, glfwGetKeyName
works fine only with the primary layout. Switching layouts results in
changing the group index. This commit querries the current group index
when initializing keyboard input and keeps track of any change to it.
As a result the scancode -> keyname mapping may change while the program
is running (needs to be documented).
Fixes#1462.
Closes#1528.
The EWMH feature detection atoms are now named and loaded the same way
as other X11 atoms. Detection is now performed after all
non-conditional atoms have been loaded. The EWMH detection now has
hopefully more readable comments.
This intersects the global work area from _NET_WORKAREA with the monitor
viewport. The monitor viewport falls back to the core display
dimensions where working RandR is missing. The _NET_WORKAREA query is
now checked for success. The _NET_WORKAREA extent array is now indexed
by _NET_CURRENT_DESKTOP. The _NET_WORKAREA atom is now checked for
availability.
Related to #1322.