If the build option is enabled KWIN_HAVE_OPENGL_1 is passed as a compile
flag when build against OpenGL.
This compile flag is meant to replace the KWIN_HAVE_OPENGLES. So far code
has been ifdefed for special behavior of OpenGL ES 2.0 and to remove
fixed functionality calls which are not available in OpenGL ES 2.0.
With this build flag the fixed functionality calls which are only used in
the OpenGL1 Compositor can be removed and keeping the KWIN_HAVE_OPENGLES
for the real differences between OpenGL 2.x and OpenGL ES 2.0.
E.g. a call like glColor4f should be in an
glColor4f(1.0, 1.0, 1.0, 1.0);
while a call like glPolygonMode should be in an
glPolygonMode(GL_FRONT_AND_BACK, GL_LINE);
Building for OpenGL ES 2.0 of course implies that KWIN_HAVE_OPENGL_1 is
not defined.
The CompositingType enum turns into flags and two new values are
introduced: OpenGL1Compositing and OpenGL2Compositing.
Those new values are or-ed to OpenGLCompositing so that a simple check
for the flag OpenGLCompositing works in case of one of those two new
values. To make the generic check for OpenGL compositing easier a method
in EffectsHandler is introduced to just check for this.
The scenes now return either OpenGL1Compositing or OpenGL2Compositing
depending on which Scene implementation. None returns OpenGLCompositing.
SceneOpenGL turns into an abstract class with two concrete subclasses:
* SceneOpenGL1
* SceneOpenGL2
It provides a factory method which first creates either the GLX or EGL
backend which is passed to a static supported() method in the concrete
sub classes. These method can test whether the backend is sufficient to
be used for the OpenGL version in question. E.g. the OpenGL 2 scene
checks whether the context is direct.
The actual rendering is moved into the subclasses with specific OpenGL 1
and OpenGL 2 code. This should make the code more readable and requires
less checks whether a Shader is bound. This is now known through the
Scene: the OpenGL1 scene will never have a shader bound, the OpenGL2 scene
will always have a shader bound.
To make this more reliable the ShaderManager is extended by a disable
method used by SceneOpenGL1 to ensure that the ShaderManager will never
be used. This also obsoletes the need to read the KWin configuration
whether legacy GL is enabled. The check is moved into the supported
method of the OpenGL2 scene.
REVIEW: 106357
The code was basically copy'n'pasted to handle both Client and Deleted
requiring to cast the Toplevel to both Client and Deleted to test whether
it is one of those.
This is now changed from runtime to compile time polymorphism. A
templated method is used to start the rendering process for the decos.
This on the one hand simplifies the code and on the other does not
require any dynamic casts any more as we use the available check on
Toplevel whether it is a Client or Deleted.
The Window implementation performed many checks whether the rendering
uses the OpenGL 1 or OpenGL 2 code path and there were quite a few
cludges around to make this work.
So instead of many if-else blocks the specific code has now been moved
into a specific sub class and calls to pure virtual method in the base
class are used to trigger this behavior. Although that adds some overhead
in a rather hot code path it should be better than the many chained
method calls used before to handle OpenGL 1 and 2.
It also makes the code a little bit more readable as all the complete
OpenGL 1 implementation is now in one block ifdefed for OpenGL ES.
The handling for creating and managing the OpenGL context is
split out of the SceneOpenGL into the abstract OpenGLBackend
and it's two subclasses GlxBackend and EglOnXBackend.
The backends take care of creating the OpenGL context on the
windowing system, e.g. on glx an OpenGL context on the overlay
window is created and in the egl case an EGL context is created.
This means that the SceneOpenGL itself does not have to care
about the specific underlying infrastructure.
Furthermore the backend provides the Textures for the specific
texture from pixmap operations. For that in each of the backend
files an additional subclass of the TexturePrivate is defined.
These subclasses hold the EglImage and GLXPixmap respectively.
The backend is able to create such a private texture and for
that the ctor of the Texture is changed to take the backend as
a parameter and the Scene provides a factory method for
creating Textures. To make this work inside Window the Textures
are now hold as pointers which seems a better choice anyway as
to the member functions pointers are passed.
The Scene has always been created and destroyed inside what is
now the split out compositor. Which means it is actually owned
by the Compositor. The static pointer has never been needed
inside KWin core. Access to the Scene is not required for the
Window Manager. The only real usage is in the EffectsHandlerImpl
and in utils.h to provide a convenient way to figure out whether
compositing is currently active (scene != NULL).
The EffectsHandlerImpl gets also created by the Compositor after
the Scene is created and gets deleted just before the Scene gets
deleted. This allows to inject the Scene into the EffectsHandlerImpl
to resolve the static access in this class.
The convenient way to access the compositing() in utils.h had
to go. To provide the same feature the Compositor provides a
hasScene() access which has the same behavior as the old method.
In order to keep the code changes small in Workspace and Toplevel
a new method compositing() is defined which properly resolves
the state. A disadvantage is that this can no longer be inlined
and consists of several method calls and pointer checks.
This patch changes the behavior of strictly bound textures such that
they are only updated if the corresponding window has been damaged.
Additionally GLTexture now keeps track of the current filter and
wrapmode setting.
REVIEW: 103655
There seems to be a problem with nouveau GLES if you want to create an
EGLImageKHR more than once in a frame for the same pixmap. This patch
circumvents the problem in the way that it implements tfp the same way
as the mesa example in
mesa/demos/src/egl/opengles1/texture_from_pixmap.c does it. A nice
side effect of this is that it also avoids the overhead of recreating
the texture for every damaged window.
REVIEW: 103303
Additionally:
- hide the GLTexture implementation using dpointers
- drop the unused function SceneOpenGL::Texture::optimizeBindDamage()
- Texture::load now loads a new texture and does not update the existing one
REVIEW: 101999
Due to changes in build system we have always either OpenGL or OpenGL ES.
This allows to remove the KWIN_HAVE_OPENGL_COMPOSITING define. In the
effects the define is kept as KWIN_HAVE_OPENGL which can be used in
future to build also an XRender only effect system.
This commit just makes the declaration of windowClosed() in Class Scene be a Q_SLOT.
The inheriting classes SceneOpenGL and SceneXRender are updated as well.
The method windowGeometryShapeChanged() from the class Scene is now a slot. It is now connected to the signal geometryShapeChanged() which is sent from Toplevel instances Client and Unmanaged.
All direct method calls were deleted.
The method windowOpacityChanged is now a protected slot in class Scene. The implementations in the subclasses SceneOpenGL and SceneXRender are the same. The slots are connected to the singal opacityChanged() from Toplevel. The connection is done in the method windowAdded() in both SceneOpenGL and SceneXRender.
The class Scene now inherits from QObject and has the Q_OBJECT macro. The inheriting classes SceneOpenGL and SceneXRender are provided with the Q_OBJECT macro. Now it is possible to use signals and slots and replace direct method calls.
Copies the shadow parts into one image and creates a GLTexture
from the image, so that we can render the complete shadow with
just one texture and one painting pass.
Should remove most of the overhead involved when rendering the new Shadows.
As a side effect this should fix missing shadows with non-NPOT GPUs and
a rendering glitch reported with NVIDIA.
REVIEW: 101742
When using graphicssystem native the texture may be using
GL_TEXTURE_RECTANGLE_ARB instead of GL_TEXTURE_2D. This
needs to be honoured in order to make KWin work reliable
with e.g. R300 chipsets.
BUG: 274607
CCBUG: 276622
FIXED-IN: 4.7.0
The adjusted code for generating texture coordinates did not
take care of GL_TEXTURE_RECTANGLE_ARB textures causing the
generation of wrong texcoords.
BUG: 276622
FIXED-IN: 4.7.0
The uniforms textureWidth and textureHeight were only needed for
normal windows. For everything else it was just 1.0/1.0, that is
normalized.
The makeArrays method is changed to produce normalized texcoords
obsoleting the need for these uniforms. So two uniforms less, one
calculation in vertex shaders less and many many lines of code
removed.
At the same time makeArrays is also adjusted to take care of
yInverted of the texture, which is needed as we no longer can use
the enableUnnormalizedTexCoords which did the yInverted transformation.
REVIEW: 101646
With raster a QPixmap is no longer a XPixmap which fails all code
which assumes that an QPixmap is an XPixmap. Depending on were in
the codebase we either convert such pixmaps to images (OpenGL) or
create a XPixmap and use QPixmap::fromX11Pixmap to get a "real"
pixmap.
It is possible that there are more code pathes were we would need
a XPixmap. Currently tested is basic functionality of no-compositing,
XRender compositing, OpenGl/GLX and OpenGL ES/EGL compositing.
For OpenGL compositing raster might result in performance improvements,
for XRender it is possible that there are regressions when using raster.
By default KWin uses whatever is the default of the system, so we just
no longer enforce native.
Of course it is a bad idea to use graphicssystem OpenGL. As that
is broken anyways in Qt, we do not check for it.
Many thanks to Philipp Knechtges for bringing up the issue, convincing
me that we need it and providing most of the patch.
REVIEW: 101132
CCMAIL: Philipp.Knechtges@rwth-aachen.de
For a complete documentation of new functionality refer to:
http://community.kde.org/KWin/Shadow
The current implementation includes a new Shadow class and Toplevel
holds a pointer to an instance of this class. The Shadow class reads
the data from the X11 Property. There is one extended class located
in SceneOpenGL to render the shadow.
Compositor is adjusted to include the shadow region into the painting
passes.
Implementation for XRender still missing and Shadow needs to respond
to size changes of the Toplevel to update cached shadow region and
WindowQuads.
Our primary target is Texture From Pixmap and it is supported
by all important drivers nowadays. If a driver is not able to
support TFP using OpenGL at all is probably no good idea and
XRender is more suited.
A color can be specified to render the geometry of the VBO.
For legacy painting glColor is used, for shader a uniform is set.
In order to allow rendering without texcoords, it is possible to pass
a null pointer as texcoords.
Shader added to scene which just renders a colored geometry without texturing.
Adds a shader to render an untransformed scene. renderGLGeometry is not used any more and replaced by generated triangles stored in a GLVertexBuffer.
The GLVertexBuffer has a new attribute to decide whether a core profile compatible rendering has to be performed.
Currently windows and EffectFrames can make use of the new shader.
The shader contains a debug mode which colours all rendered fragments in green. It is currently enabled in scene_opengl.
Rendering transformed geometries (without shader) is currently broken.
differecens to patch atteched to 258971:
- removed debug statements
- fixed indention...
- NON vsync strategy does not rely on the estimation, but on the time passed since the last repaint trigger, allowing a precise framerate
CCBUG: 258971
svn path=/trunk/KDE/kdebase/workspace/; revision=1210445
this should improve v'syncing, maybe v'synced "smoothness"
remaining and exposed issue are "dirty textures" w/o damage events (see the requst description)
can be diminished by increasing MaxFPS above the fastest update (or shadowed below the slowest one)
CCBUG: 258971
svn path=/trunk/KDE/kdebase/workspace/; revision=1207577
The GLX implementation in the X server appears to have a hardcoded limit
to how many pixmaps can be bound to textures simultaneously when using
indirect rendering, which we can end up exceeding with the changes
introduced in r1182198.
BUG: 256359
FIXED-IN: 4.5.5
svn path=/trunk/KDE/kdebase/workspace/; revision=1203578
This worksaround a problem with the nouveau driver causing
the text frames to be incorrectly rendered. We need to keep
the QPixmap around as long as we have a texture created from
that texture.
This applies for the text and the unstyled effect frame. For
the frames generated from Plasma's FrameSvgs it is not required.
Addresses freedesktop.org bug 30286
svn path=/trunk/KDE/kdebase/workspace/; revision=1184458