Move some generic properties to the OutputLayer class and add a cursor
layer getter in the RenderBackend class. That allows us to get rid of
some code duplication. And we could use this work to move more cursor layer
code from backends to Compositor.
Sending an axis event for every high-res scroll wheel movement was
causing excessive scrolling on clients that expect low-res (discrete)
scroll events.
Signed-off-by: John Brooks <john@fastquake.com>
At quick glance, it doesn't seem like there's any benefit from storing
the shadow elements as pixmaps. It saves us some QImage <-> QPixmap
conversions too.
Creating views is the main thing blocking quick effect activation.
Rather than blocking until everything is created, we can use
QQmlIncubator so we create views asynchronously. This allows KWin to do
other things while views are being created. This is mostly relevant for
multiscreen setups where we create a view per screen.
If there's windows and we're not searching, we don't need the
PlaceholderMessage. So only create it when we actually need it to reduce
the time needed to activate the effect.
We don't need the features of Repeater here and can instead just use an
Instantiator, which allows us to use asynchronous creation for the
window delegates, reducing the time needed to activate the effect.
There are some performance differences between X11 and Wayland. Desktop
systems are mostly unaffected by them, but laptops suffer a bit.
On Wayland, kwin always does double buffering. This is great for
reducing latency and avoiding tearing, but if the gpu can't keep up with
the work, you're going to see stuttering.
Another issue is that in order to reduce latency, we need to have very
good frame stats. At the moment, kwin records only cpu render time, but
we also need to record the gpu time. We've already done some work in
this area, but it's most likely Plasma 6 material. (plasma/kwin!1163)
In the meantime, let's change the default latency policy to "Force
smoother animations." It's going to improve frame rate. If people care
about latency, they can change latency policy in system settings; the
option is still there.
CCBUG: 452119
Main reason to support this old interface is because this is the only
protocol chromium (and effectively all electron app) that supports.
The protocol itself very similar to text-input-v2 with some minor difference.
So not hard to support by just duplicate some existing code. There might be
some unclear protocol design issue if kwin need to support multiple SeatInterface,
but for now it should be ok to assume there is only one seat.
Tested using fcitx5 against weston-editor and chromium with flag
--enable-features=UseOzonePlatform --ozone-platform=wayland
--enable-wayland-ime
The window rules kcm uses lower-case window class and role, but kwin can
use window class and role with other casing, which will break the ExactMatch
match rule.
BUG: 464190
It is being phased out. Instead, read the pixels from the
cursor's framebuffer using `glReadPixels`.
Signed-off-by: Victoria Fischer <victoria.fischer@mbition.io>
There's a visual glitch that looks like a random rectangle in the top
left corner of morphing popup. It appears like it's caused by the blur
effect, it produces wrong results when the window is captured in
CrossFadeEffect::redirect().
Make CrossFadeEffect::redirect() unset blur and contrast force roles, so
the backdrop effects are not included in the captured frame.
Backdrop effects such as blur and background contrast have to be in the
front of the effect chain because they need to work with background
before the window is painted on top.
Hopefully it's going to fix panel popup blinking visual artifacts.
The subdivided grid used by these effects doesn't account for pixel
alignment. If we force the generated WindowQuads to be rounded, the
quad's sizes no longer match the texture sizes, which results in blurry
rendering.
BUG: 461283
eeffects
Currently, only two modes are provided, rounding or not rounding, which
allows explicitly disabling snapping. However, should we have a reason
to add more modes it is now fairly simple to change.
The value is a representation of the discrete steps a mouse wheel can take.
Multiplying that with a scroll speed destroys the whole purpose of the value.
Some global themes, e.g. Breeze Dark, don't ship a switcher and instead point to the one from the Beeze global theme
They do show up in the selection though, which is confusing and doesn't actually work