Back when GtkFileSystemModel was a GtkTreeModel implementation, it
had an empty first item that was used for renaming files. Of course,
after we moved away from GtkTreeModel, this empty item became an
obsolete detail.
Remove it.
The _gtk_file_system_model_update_file() function is not used outside
GtkFileSystemModel, so no need to expose it in the header.
Shuffle it around in code, and remove it from the header.
Fixes build with only `-Dgtk_doc=true` without
`-Dintrospection=enabled`:
Program gi-docgen found: NO
Configuring gdk4.toml using configuration
docs/reference/gdk/meson.build:13:2: ERROR: Tried to use not-found external program in "command"
`introspection` is `auto` by default.
The rest of the docs build is only contingent on
`if get_option('gtk_doc')` so we should use the same restriction here.
We check for `build_gir` below already, and the gi-docgen subproject
itself does not need gobject-introspection so it's fine to do it like
this.
Installed tests require access to the system prefix, and thus a
system-wide installation of Meson, which we don't have.
We're going to restore this job at a later date.
We don't want to bring undefined dependencies into the image.
Additionally, Wayland depends on Meson, and we don't want to use
Fedora's version of Meson.
ClutterInputFocus/GtkIMContext uses char based offset for
delete_surrounding, however, text_input_v3 uses byte based offset for
it. Currently only GTK with mutter can work correctly via text_input_v3
because they both forget to convert between char based offset and byte
based offset.
This commit fixes it in GTK by converting byte based offset to char
based offset with the UTF-8 encoded surrounding text.
Fixes <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gtk/-/issues/4566>.
Dummy dependencies are not required to execute a subproject
automatically for providing a program, nor do you need to explicitly
call subproject() to do that.
A `[provide]` section in the wrap file is enough.
Subprojects that use meson.override_dependency() do not require the
caller to provide the dependency variable name inside the subproject.
We also don't want to provide the *subproject* name, because the
subproject name can be `pango-1.50.12` instead of `pango` when using
wrap-file to download the tarball instead of using wrap-git. This
causes the pango subproject to be executed twice when using gtk as
a subproject inside gstreamer (which uses pango-1.50.12 as
a wrap-file).
All the dependencies we use can be switched in this way, but the
remaining ones need to be changed to use meson.override_dependency()
first.
The is_msvc_like change is wrong; it used a false correlation between
"compiler being used" and "dependency method" by saying that on
Windows, when building with MSVC, you will only use CMake to find png,
jpeg, tiff.
You can use pkgconfig to find these deps on Windows with MSVC -- when
the deps have been built with Autotools or Meson (with MSVC). You can
also find these deps using CMake on other platforms like macOS or
Linux.
The solution is simple: just search for both names on all platforms,
and just search for the pkgconfig name first.
Accept labels can be used for additional context regarding
the purpose of a file. The old GtkFileChooser APIs allowed
developers to set it, but the initial FileDialog API was missing
this functionality.
This commit adds `gtk_file_dialog_set_accept_label ()` to
restore the missing functionality.
Closes https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gtk/-/issues/5421
The EventControllerFocus on the list item, updates the list base focus
tracker and scrolled to position any time the list item enters focus.
This works when interacting within a single window, but has unexpected
results when changing focus between multiple windows.
Instead of using the focus controller workaround, just make
gtk_list_base_update_focus_tracker the set_focus_child vfunc
Fixes: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gtk/-/issues/5433
Fixes: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gtk/-/issues/5432
meson setup:
configuration
meson compile:
compilation
meson install
installation
Do not use ninja directly, and do not use `meson` as a synonym for
`meson setup`.
The unaligned-offscreen and upside-down-label-3d tests are failing after
upgrading our CI images, seemingly because of some font rendering issue
that is hard to track. Let's use the "failing" testsuite mechanism that
we also use for the reftests.
Try to get a native file:// URI instead of any other GVFS
scheme, for interoperability with apps only handling file:// URIs.
This is what GTK3 Nautilus and Thunar do, so apps should be tuned
for this behavior.
See also https://bugzilla.xfce.org/show_bug.cgi?id=13845Fixes: #5422
The path bar does a lot of manual management of buttons, mostly to
be able to show navigation arrows when there's not enough space to
show the full path.
Since the GTK4 migration, this is slightly broken in some cases, due
to the 'need_sliders' variable being always set to TRUE. Furthermore,
after the introduction of the Recent button as a special cased fake
root, the allocation of the buttons is generating warnings.
Reimplement the path bar as a GtkBox, inside a GtkScrolledWindow.
This mimics what Nautilus does, and allows us to make navigation more
predictable, and remove most of the complexity from GtkPathBar. It
also prevents it from generating allocation warnings.
The path bar itself now doesn't override GtkWidget.measure nor
GtkWidget.allocate; instead, it delegates layout to the GtkBinLayout
layout manager.
CSS is adjusted to account for the changed hierarchy of buttons.
It's positioned and looks exactly like the browse_toggle_view_button,
but due to the way things are organized, we cannot simply reuse that
button.
Add a clone of browse_toggle_view_button in the search entry page of
the toolbar stack. Make it toggle the same action as of the original
button, and bind the icon name and tooltip texts to it too.
Most of the pointer comparisons against 'browse_files_column_view'
should actually be performed against the current view widget. As
it turns out, it weren't that many places after all.
Add a grid view outside of the widgetry tree. The grid view mimics
the column view using bindings, so we only need to manage the column
view.
Also add a button in the path bar section to toggle the view. This
is handled as a new 'toggle-view' action in the file chooser.
The way switching between views currently work is by setting either
the column or grid view as the child of the GtkScrolledWindow. This
has the benefit of unmapping the unused view, which is nice and can
avoid some tricky situations with thumbnails.
Fixes https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gtk/-/issues/233
Notifications are not going to be emitted during the finalization, and
GObject will warn if you try to acquire and release a reference to the
notification queue when the reference count of an object has reached
zero.
Fixes: #5420
Recommend that scope implementations should fall
back to or derive from GtkBuilderCScope in order
to not lose GTK's type-guessing machinery.
Related: #5398
Nested async calls are always a challenge.
Hopefully, things are straightened out now,
and we report GTK_DIALOG_ERROR errors for
the cases we care about.
If the parent window of the button gets destroyed
while the dialog is open, we cancel the async op,
but we need to be a little more careful about not
stepping on glass.
If the parent window of the button gets destroyed
while the dialog is open, we cancel the async op,
but we need to be a little more careful about not
stepping on glass.
Determine the location to save testcases in dynamically,
trying first a GTK_SOURCE_DIR environment variable
and then the current directory as the GTK source dir,
ultimatively falling back to just saving in the current
directory.
This avoids leaking details of the build environment
into the produced artifacts and should make GTK builds
more reproducible.
Fixes: #5403
The header in GtkColumnView has multiple event handlers
there is a ::pressed handler in GtkColumnView for
resizing the columns in CAPTURE as well as a motion
and drag controller. The ::release handler is in
GtkColumnViewTitle. We can't claim the event in the
existing handlers because then the ::release handler will
never get called. Currently, however, all clicks get propagated
to the ColumnView from the header which can be problematic.
Since we don't usually want the clicks from the header
handled on the view, claim it in the BUBBLE phase.
Fixes: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gtk/-/issues/5425
Currently, the GdkSurfaceX11 implementation relies that the upper
layers hid the surface before destruction, and that no
GdkSurfaceClass.compute_resize happened between them. If these
circumstances happened, there would be a compute_size timeout left
dangling after the surface got destroyed, poking at incorrect data
later on. Something that looks like this was reported in the
recent mutter-x11-frames "SSD frames server":
mutter-x11-frames:423016): GLib-GObject-WARNING **: 19:41:16.869: invalid unclassed pointer in cast to 'GtkWindow'
Thread 1 "mutter-x11-fram" received signal SIGTRAP, Trace/breakpoint trap.
g_logv (log_domain=0x7ffff7f7c4f8 "GLib-GObject", log_level=G_LOG_LEVEL_WARNING, format=<optimized out>, args=<optimized out>) at ../../../glib/gmessages.c:1433
1433 ../../../glib/gmessages.c: No such file or directory.
(gdb) bt
#0 g_logv (log_domain=0x7ffff7f7c4f8 "GLib-GObject", log_level=G_LOG_LEVEL_WARNING, format=<optimized out>, args=<optimized out>) at ../../../glib/gmessages.c:1433
#1 0x00007ffff73470ff in g_log (log_domain=log_domain@entry=0x7ffff7f7c4f8 "GLib-GObject", log_level=log_level@entry=G_LOG_LEVEL_WARNING, format=format@entry=0x7ffff7f84da8 "invalid unclassed pointer in cast to '%s'")
at ../../../glib/gmessages.c:1471
#2 0x00007ffff7f72892 in g_type_check_instance_cast (type_instance=type_instance@entry=0x5555558e04b0, iface_type=<optimized out>) at ../../../gobject/gtype.c:4144
#3 0x00007ffff791e77d in toplevel_compute_size (toplevel=<optimized out>, size=0x7fffffffe170, widget=0x5555558e04b0) at ../../../gtk/gtkwindow.c:4227
#4 0x00007ffff7f4f3b0 in g_closure_invoke (closure=0x555555898cc0, return_value=return_value@entry=0x0, n_param_values=2, param_values=param_values@entry=0x7fffffffdeb0, invocation_hint=invocation_hint@entry=0x7fffffffde30)
at ../../../gobject/gclosure.c:832
#5 0x00007ffff7f62076 in signal_emit_unlocked_R
(node=node@entry=0x55555588feb0, detail=detail@entry=0, instance=instance@entry=0x55555560e990, emission_return=emission_return@entry=0x0, instance_and_params=instance_and_params@entry=0x7fffffffdeb0)
at ../../../gobject/gsignal.c:3796
#6 0x00007ffff7f68bf5 in g_signal_emit_valist (instance=<optimized out>, signal_id=<optimized out>, detail=<optimized out>, var_args=var_args@entry=0x7fffffffe050) at ../../../gobject/gsignal.c:3549
#7 0x00007ffff7f68dbf in <emit signal ??? on instance 0x55555560e990 [GdkX11Toplevel]> (instance=<optimized out>, signal_id=<optimized out>, detail=detail@entry=0) at ../../../gobject/gsignal.c:3606
#8 0x00007ffff7a8de96 in gdk_toplevel_notify_compute_size (toplevel=<optimized out>, size=size@entry=0x7fffffffe170) at ../../../gdk/gdktoplevel.c:112
#9 0x00007ffff7a4b15a in compute_toplevel_size (surface=surface@entry=0x55555560e990 [GdkX11Toplevel], update_geometry=update_geometry@entry=1, width=width@entry=0x7fffffffe220, height=height@entry=0x7fffffffe224)
at ../../../gdk/x11/gdksurface-x11.c:281
#10 0x00007ffff7a4c3b2 in compute_size_idle (user_data=0x55555560e990) at ../../../gdk/x11/gdksurface-x11.c:356
#11 0x00007ffff733f67f in g_main_dispatch (context=0x55555563f6e0) at ../../../glib/gmain.c:3444
#12 g_main_context_dispatch (context=context@entry=0x55555563f6e0) at ../../../glib/gmain.c:4162
#13 0x00007ffff733fa38 in g_main_context_iterate (context=0x55555563f6e0, block=block@entry=1, dispatch=dispatch@entry=1, self=<optimized out>) at ../../../glib/gmain.c:4238
#14 0x00007ffff733fcef in g_main_loop_run (loop=loop@entry=0x5555560874a0) at ../../../glib/gmain.c:4438
#15 0x0000555555557de0 in main (argc=<optimized out>, argv=<optimized out>) at ../src/frames/main.c:68
It perhaps makes sense to warn in these situations, but either way
it sounds like gdk_surface_x11_finalize() could enforce the correct
behavior by ensuring there is no dangling timeouts/data. This commit
does that.
Active state is handled by main now. It appears that listitem and
treeexpander handled it manually (probably before main did). This
is unnecessary now, so let's remove it.
If the anchor is below the expanded item, the expanded item will
go out of view if there are sufficient children items. This is not
ideal, so make sure to scroll to the item to ensure it remains in
view.
With the introduction of the hide-expander property, I noticed that
the active state would persist in many cases because the release
signal was never emitted. In gtk3 tree expanders, expanded
on release. gtk4 expanded on press to match window explorer.
Per irc chat, the designers didn't have a strong preference
for press or release. In order to keep consistency and
fix this bug, let's move back to release.
We are caching the bus address as data on the display object when it
exists, but fail to set the data when the bus address doesn't exist.
That causing excessive calls to GetAddress when the accesssbility
bus doesn't exist. Make sure to cache a non-existent accessibility
bus by setting the "" string.
gtk_widget_set_visible and gtk_window_present
are better alternatives, and calling gtk_widget_show
on newly created widgets is no longer necessary
anyway.
With GtkText and GtkTextView (and in extension, all their subclasses)
handling OSK activation activation, this gesture is only useful for
all text input widgets that are not subclasses of these 2 widgets,
e.g. the VTEs and crosswords of the world.
These still do need a hand in handling OSK activation, so only
set up the gesture for such cases.
If the ::release handler is invoked, the press/release happened without
drags in between. Additionally check that there is no selection at all.
This makes OSK invoked on taps that move the caret around, while tapping
in the selection invokes edition popup and text handles without bringing
in the OSK.
This way, the drag gesture lets the click gesture ::release handler
happen if there was no actual changes to the selected text (i.e.
too short drags). This matches the ::release handler behavior match
the situations in which the OSK was being invoked by the wayland
GtkIMContext.
If the ::release handler is invoked, the press/release happened without
drags in between. Additionally check that the press did not happen within
the selection, and that there is no selection at all.
This makes OSK invoked on taps that move the caret around, while tapping
in the selection invokes edition popup and text handles without bringing
in the OSK.
This way, the drag gesture lets the click gesture ::release handler
happen if there was no actual changes to the selected text (i.e.
too short drags). This matches the ::release handler behavior match
the situations in which the OSK was being invoked by the wayland
GtkIMContext.
This method is so far private for both external GtkIMContext
implementations and external GtkIMContext users, and is meant
to activate the OSK in the environments where this may happen.
GTK depends on the a11y infrastructure to be in place unless GTK_A11Y is
set to none. It appears that despite that, users attempt to
get around the a11y requirement without setting GTK_A11Y.
This can cause, amongst other issues, performance problems
with gtk applications. Log failure to connect to the a11y
bus.
The python3-toml package is deprecated, and replaced by python3-tomli.
At least, until we bump up the dependency to Fedora 37: then we can
depend on Python 3.11, and its TOML parser in the standard library.
See also: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gi-docgen/-/merge_requests/168
These tests can be run manually, but are not suitable for use as an
acceptance test, so let's not make frameworks like Debian's autopkgtest
run these when they run ginsttest-runner in the most obvious way.
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@debian.org>
There are two possible interpretations of "expected failure": either
the test *must* fail (exactly the inverse of an ordinary test, with
success becoming failure and failure becoming success), or the test
*may* fail (with success intended, but failure possible in some
environments). Autotools had the second interpretation, which seems
more useful in practice, but Meson has the first.
Instead of using should_fail, we can put the tests in one of two new
suites: "flaky" is intended for tests that succeed or fail unpredictably
according to the test environment or chance, while "failing" is for
tests that ought to succeed but currently never do as a result of a
bug or missing functionality. With a sufficiently new version of Meson,
the flaky and failing tests are not run by default, but can be requested
by running a setup that does not exclude them, with a command like:
meson test --setup=x11_unstable --suite=flaky --suite=failing
As a bonus, now that we're setting up setups and their excluded suites
programmatically, the gsk-compare-broadway tests are also excluded by
default when running the test setup for a non-broadway backend.
When running the tests in CI, --suite=gtk overrides the default
exclude_suites, so we have to specify --no-suite=flaky and
--no-suite=failing explicitly.
This arrangement is inspired by GNOME/glib!2987, which was contributed
by Marco Trevisan.
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@debian.org>
By dividing the blur radius to obtain the clip radius, we may end up
with halved values that result in an overshunk clip mask. Extend this
so that we ensure to cover the last pixel.
Fixes artifacts seen with the cairo renderer in X11 when resizing
windows horizontally, a black 1px high line would be seen in the
top of the window due to these outset bounds being used in clipping.
More mysteriously, also seems to fix resize lag in the GL renderer
(also X11), if e.g. the bottom-right corner of a window is resized
diagonally in bottom-left -> top-right direction, or
bottom-right -> top-left.
Related: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/merge_requests/2175#note_1599335
By using wl_output_release(), GDK lets the compositor to clean up the
output global more nicely.
For example, currently, most compositors remove the global and then
destroy it later after N seconds expire. With this, the compositor could
experiment with destroying the output global once all its resources are
destroyed.
this allows setting a Gtk.GestureStylus to a state, where it can be
used to handle non-stylus devices (e.g. mice).
This might be useful for applications that handle stylus input, but
want to allow falling back to a mice, if the user is unable to provide
stylus input.
this is to prevent gdk from causing a segfault, when getting event axes
for events that don't have them (i.e. attempting to get pressure from a
mice input device).
GDK_TOUCH_END deserves the same treatment than GDK_BUTTON_RELEASE, since it's
subject to the same circumstances (popping up a menu on long press would be
immediately dismissed on release if we handled them there). Ideally, we would
want to match releases that we obtained a press for while grabbed, but as
the popup is also dismissed on GDK_BUTTON_PRESS/GDK_TOUCH_BEGIN, there's no
use for this tracking.
And GDK_TOUCH_CANCEL sounds weird as a reason to dismiss popups, just like
crossing events would.
Related: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter/-/issues/2512
Even though button 1 (or touch down) presses do most often have
an effect in one way or another (starting drag, moving focus,
starting selection, ...), there is one situation that they do
immediately nothing: When clicking on the entry does not move
the text caret around. Dragging might start a selection, but
the entry did not do anything just yet, and an immediate
button/touch release should remain at "did nothing".
And that is precisely the hint that the Wayland IM context's click
gesture takes, clicks that do not scroll nor move the caret around,
having the GtkText not claim the gesture in that situation makes
the IM gesture able to do its thing without in-fighting.
This is typically not a problem when the GtkText is embedded in
another GtkEditable implementation (e.g. GtkEntry), since the
IM gesture is inactive and capturing from the parent widget, so
gets a pass that it otherwise doesn't get when both gestures are
in the same widget. This makes it work regardless of GtkText not
being a child of a composite widget, like NautilusQueryEditor
and AdwRowEntry.
Closes: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gtk/-/issues/5351
Everybody (including myself) gets this wrong,
so accept 'simple' and 'none' as shorthands
for the official IDs 'gtk-im-context-simple'
and 'gtk-im-context-none'.
clang complained that we may end up jumping
to the cleanup code without initializing data
in the jpeg code. Always initialize data to
NULL to prevent that eventuality.
GTK knows when a surface is modally blocked and automatically drops
button press and release events, so do not block input in advance
from WM_MOUSEACTIVATE.
This is largely adapted from commit 83027c68f1 ("11: Implement
inhibit_system_shortcuts API"), with similar rationale:
To implement the inhibit_system_shortcuts API on X11, we emulate the
same behavior using grabs on the keyboard.
To avoid keeping active grabs on the keyboard that would affect
other X11 applications even when the surface isn't focused, the X11
implementation takes care of releasing the grabs as soon as the
toplevel loses focus.
Note that Windows has low-level keyboard hooks that could help achieve
the expected behaviour. This is implemented by spice-gtk & gtk-vnc for
example, but correctness isn't obvious. I left a TODO comment.
This patch helps implementing remote desktop widgets with GTK4, since
currently on win32 backend Alt-Tab and such are always left to the
system unless there is keyboard grab (which can't be requested by the
client API anymore, afaict).
Signed-off-by: Marc-André Lureau <marcandre.lureau@redhat.com>
We are not normally using the gtk40-pot target to
generate the gtk40.pot file. On the off chance that
somebody does, lets make sure we pass the same
arguments to xgettext here as in the make-pot script
that is used on damn lies.
Noticed this while reviewing the gi-docgen docs for GtkAspectFrame while developing some java bindings.
It's my understanding that @self was intended; as it would cause gi-docgen to interpret it as a reference to
the the GtkAspectFrame pointer named 'self'.
This script is used to extract our strings for translators
on damn lines, and passing these flags to xgettext makes
it put a hint into the pot file about strings that are
used as printf format strings.
8455b9ac74 seems to have introduced a problem where we can wind
up focusing no widget at all if the `while (parent)` loop doesn't
find a widget it can successfully move the focus to. This 'fixes'
that by falling back to doing the previous thing if we make it
all the way through that loop without moving the focus. Thanks to
@coreyberla for a hint to improve the implementation.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
There's 2 things broken here:
- The mask was calculated on top of the GDK button (i.e. skipping
4-7 buttons), so GDK_BUTTON4_MASK and GDK_BUTTON5_MASK were not
assigned. This is now calculated on the (continuous) BTN_ evcodes
so it is guaranteed that the next 2 physical buttons (i.e.
back/forward) get these two places in the mask assigned.
- Furthermore, these buttons would be pushed to places in the
modifier mask that they didn't belong to. It is now checked hard
that only the first 5 buttons enable a modifier flag.
Overall, this ensures that no event masks with bonkers values are
forwarded, and that no stale implicit grabs are left after additional
buttons are pressed.
Closes: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gtk/-/issues/5301
This makes GtkSettings values on X11 match what we get on
other backends.
Reporting size settings in logical pixels (i.e for scale
== 1) is useful for properly supporting mixed-DPI setups.
As X11 doesn't support mixed-DPI setups anyway, XSettings
doesn't bother providing logical values. Thus we scale
from physical to logical values ourselves.
Fixes https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gtk/-/issues/5223
Fixes https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gtk/-/issues/5230
This reverts commit acd9c12667.
This commit breaks the build with GLib main on all platforms,
and defining _GLIB_EXTERN arguably invades the GLib namespace.
A different fix for msvc will have to be found.
Add a test that runs make-pot. This will only pass
if you've updated po/POTFILES.in and .skip after
moving source files around.
Unfortunately, it won't catch new source files that
are missing.
These are being replaced by GtkFileDialog.
This commit only moves the headers for GtkFileChooserWidget and
GtkFileChooserDialog to deprecated/, and keeps the implementations
in gtk/, since they will eventually be salvaged into a private
GtkFileChooserWindow.
It is getting replaced by GtkAlertDialog
This commit only moves the header to deprecated/,
and keeps the implementation in gtk/, since it will
eventually be salvaged into a private, dialog-free
widget.
These are being replaced by GtkFontDialog
and GtkFontDialogButton
This commit only moves the headers for GtkFontChooserWidget and
GtkFontChooserDialog to deprecated/, and keeps the implementations
in gtk/, since they will eventually be salvaged into a private
GtkFontChooserWindow.
These are being replaced by GtkColorDialog
and GtkColorDialogButton.
This commit only moves the headers for GtkColorChooserWidget
and GtkColorChooserDialog to deprecated/, and keeps the
implementations in gtk/, since they will eventually be
salvaged into a private GtkColorChooserWindow.
As far as I'm aware, these only exist with `gdk_wayland_surface_` names
for historical reasons, before these types were split.
This way, those functions will be able to access members of the
`GdkWaylandToplevel` struct. And it just saves a few lines of code.
2022-09-26 14:22:37 -07:00
573 changed files with 24417 additions and 9220 deletions
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