In case that one of the checks in SceneOpenGL failed the ctor of the
sub-class continued and set init_ok to true although it should have been
set to false.
Now init_ok starts with true and if a check fails it is set to false.
For 4.11 we should consider using an exception here - variables to check
that init code works are just no proper solution.
REVIEW: 107420
Add an option to kcmcompositing in the 'Advanced' tab, to enable or
disable color correction. It is specified that it's experimental and it
needs Kolor Manager.
Before painting for a particular screen, ColorCorrection::setupForOutput
should be called.
A screen property is added for WindowPaintData.
In kwinglutils, The fragment shaders are intercepted before being
compiled and they get a couple of lines of code inserted in order to do
the color correction. This happens only when color correction is enabled, of
course.
For D-Bus communication with KolorServer, everything is async.
The implementation basically manages a set of color lookup tables for
different outputs and for different window regions. These are taken via
D-Bus. Each lookup table has around 700 KB.
This commit reintroduces the changes from the former merge with the
"color2" branch. In this form, it can be easily reverted.
REVIEW: 106141
This was originally added by d467fc1bdbcf69bd6ef213bd909633c2edfb6878,
to prevent alpha ending up to be 0 with blending disabled. Apparently,
that was a driver issue that is no longer present.
REVIEW: 107090
This merge is incomplete and it does not include the review number of
the associated review request. It should have been pushed as a single
commit, because the merged commits were not intended to be published in
their form.
This reverts commit dcba90263069a221a5489b1915c5cf1ca39d090c, reversing
changes made to 50ae07525c7fde07794e7548c3d6e5a69cb1a89d.
Conflicts:
kwin/scene_opengl.cpp
kwin/scene_opengl.h
A decoration can provide the AbilityAnnounceAlphaChannel in addition to
AbilityUsesAlphaChannel. If this ability is provided the decoration can
enable/disable the use of the alpha channel through setAlphaEnabled().
The base idea behind this mechanism is to be able to tell the compositor
that currently alpha is not needed. An example is the maximized state in
which the decoration is fully opaque so that there is no need to use the
translucency code path which would render all windows behind the deco.
In addition also the blur effect honors this setting so that behind a
known opaque decoration no blurring is performed.
Oxygen is adjusted to disable translucency in maximized state and Aurorae
is adjusted to allow themes to enable/disable translucency. For Plastik
translucency and with that also blurring is disabled.
REVIEW: 106810
Adjustment to reality. KWin has had a dependency on Mesa 8.0 for quite
some time given that it is what basically all distributions ship.
It is better to clearly state what is required. For KWin Mesa 8.0 is a
more reliable dependency as all DRI drivers which do not support DRI2
have been removed.
Packagers have been informed about this intended change some weeks ago.
REVIEW: 106799
During detecting the OpenGL capabilities also a recommended compositor
can be set. This recommendation is honoured by the OpenGL based
compositors. That is the SceneOpenGL2 requires a recommendation for at
least OpenGL2 and the SceneOpenGL1 requires at least a recommendation for
OpenGL1. If the driver recommends XRender compositing the SceneOpenGL
performs the existing fallback to XRender.
With this recommendation the hacks in the Scene are removed, e.g. it is
no longer checked whether the driver is software emulation as that is
provided through the recommendation.
To overrule the recommendation the environment variable KWIN_COMPOSE is
extended by the values O1 and O2 to enforce either OpenGL 1 or OpenGL 2.
This overwrites all other checks. As a side-effect this allows now to run
KWin on the llvmpipe:
LIBGL_ALWAYS_SOFTWARE=1 KWIN_COMPOSE=O2 kwin --replace &
But not that I would recommend to use it :-)
REVIEW: 106741
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 only task of the PaintRedirector is to redirect the painting of the
window decorations into Pixmaps. So it should actually do this by also
handling the four pixmaps for the decoration. This simplifies the code
as all the logic concerning redirecting the painting is now grouped
together.
Furthermore the PaintRedirector is now a child of the decoration widget,
which means it gets automatically destroyed whenever the decoration is
destroyed - the Client does not have to care about it.
Also the PaintRedirector gets only created if the Compositor is active as
it is not needed in the non-compositing case.
REVIEW: 106620
The Egl backend is decoupled from the OpenGL ES build option which makes
it possible to use it as a replacement for glx.
To make this possible a new build flag is added when egl is available at
compile time and any egl specific code is now ifdefed with this flag
instead of the gles flag. In addition at runtime a windowing system enum
value is passed to the various detect methods to have egl/glx specific
detection for e.g. function pointer resolving.
By default egl is used if compiled with OpenGL ES, otherwise glx is used.
But in the non-gles case the windowing system can be selected through the
new environment variable KWIN_OPENGL_INTERFACE. Setting this variable to
"egl" the EglOnXBackend is used.
REVIEW: 106632
The ShaderBinder class can be used for the case that a block of code
should be executed with a given Shader being bound. This is useful for
all the cases where there is a if-block for OpenGL2 execution with a
Shader being pushed in the first line to the ShaderManager and popped in
the last line of the block. With the helper this can be simplified to:
ShaderBinder binder(myCustomShader);
or
ShaderBinder binder(ShaderManager::GenericShader);
The ctor of ShaderBinder pushes the given Shader to the stack and once
the helper goes out of scope it will be popped again from the stack.
In addition the helper can take care of OpenGL 1 compositing, that is it
just does nothing. So it can also be used where there is a shared OpenGL1
and OpenGL2 code path where the Shader should only be pushed in OpenGL2.
This basically removes all the checks for the compositing type before
pushing/popping a Shader to the stack.
REVIEW: 106521
Results in cleaner changes.
Put all the color correction stuff from SceneOpenGL in SceneOpenGL2.
Conflicts:
kwin/eglonxbackend.cpp
kwin/glxbackend.cpp
kwin/scene.h
kwin/scene_opengl.cpp
kwin/scene_opengl.h
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.
The implementation consists of a class in libkwineffects.
There are some slight modifications in the compositor. Regions for
different outputs are drawn at different times.
Currently only per output color correction is implemented. However, the
grounds are prepared for implementing per window color correction
easily.
The ColorCorrection class needs to communicate via D-Bus with a KDED
module, KolorServer, which is a part of KolorManager.
The only visible part for the user consists of a check box in the
advanced tab for the compositing KCM.
The actual correction is done by injecting a piece of code in the
fragment shader, code that does a 3D lookup into a special color lookup
texture. The data for these textures is obtained from KolorServer. All
D-Bus calls are async.
The public member variables for opacity, saturation and brightness
are removed in favor for getter and setters. The variables are
moved into a private class. Those are now qreal instead of double.
To make usage inside the effects easier a multiply method is added
which multiplies the current value with passed in factor and returns
the new value in a functional programming style.
This commit is the top-most of a patch series to refactor
ScreenPaintData and WindowPaintData. Other related commits are:
* 0811772
* ebdc7ec
* 2c8dd8d
* 7699726
* 68e0201
* 611cb09
REVIEW: 105141
BUG: 303314
FIXED-IN: 4.10
No effect has ever made use of contents opacity. Which means it
is not needed. Removing means faster effects as we used to
multiply the value (always 1.0) with the opacity in each frame
for each window.
This makes kwin in OpenGL2 mode more coherent with kwin_gles.
Despite some fullscreen effects they should now make the same
(pure) OpenGL calls.
REVIEW: 103804
a) fixes the texture offset calculation
b) arranges he shadow pixmaps as border in the texture to avoid interpolation issues.
BUG: 280116
BUG: 282882
CCBUG: 291161
BUG: 293325
REVIEW: 103888
a) fixes the texture offset calculation
b) arranges he shadow pixmaps as border in the texture to avoid interpolation issues.
BUG: 280116
BUG: 282882
CCBUG: 291161
BUG: 293325
REVIEW: 103888
This patch reduces the number of QRegion and WindowQuadList operations
by drawing the opaque and translucent parts of the window within the
same bottom to top pass.
REVIEW: 103671
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.
All the functionality of Overlay Window is moved to its own class
OverlayWindow. It is created and owned by class Scene, since almost
all function calls are called from this class.
REVIEW: 101866
Construct window quads which will end on the screen instead of
rendering the windows several times and using scissoring to
restrict to the area which will end on screen.
REVIEW: 101765
This commit merges the two signals clientClosed() and unmanagedClosed() to windowClosed() which
is now provided by Toplevel.
The approriate slots in effects.h and effects.cpp were merges as well, since they did the
same.
The direct method calls of the method windowClosed() in SceneOpenGL and SceneXRender were
removed and are now connected to the appropriate signal in windowAdded().
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.
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
by checking the graphicssystem at startup
also avoid pixmap and memory leaking on the xrender backend, validate some pointers
on deletion in SceneOpnGL and avoid attempts to render ::isNull pixmaps
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
On NVIDIA it is possible that the actual rendering gets delayed to
after the deletion of the pixmap during the end of fullscreen effects.
This was causing freezes. By using glFlush before deleting the pixmaps
we can ensure that the pixmap is not needed anymore after the pixmaps
are deleted.
BUG: 261323
FIXED-IN: 4.6.3
The Shadow is clearly an aspect of the compositor. Therefore the
Shadow has to be owned and controlled by the Scene::Window.
Nevertheless Toplevel needs to know about the Shadow cause of reading
the property.
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.
Second part of cleaning up the lib directory: the effects library
now lives in libkwineffects/ directory.
For existing effects nothing changes as the install path is unchanged.
The change obsoletes the lib/ directory.
As glplatform.h has not yet been exported I dared to export it and
adjust the places where it is used.
CCMAIL: kwin@kde.org
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.
When rendering opaque (RGB-only) windows the alpha ends up to be 0
with blending disabled. This breaks subsequent rendering steps which
require blenden (e.g. Lanczos). Therefore a uniform is used to ensure
that the alpha channel is set to 1.
The vertex buffer implementation uses the shader manager to decide
whether core painting should be used or not. Shader manager is only
used by shaders using vertex attributes instead of gl_Vertex etc.
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
Prefer the GL_TEXTURE_2D target if the framebuffer configuration indicates
that it's supported.
This fixes a performance problem with the r600g driver.
freedesktop bug 30483.
svn path=/trunk/KDE/kdebase/workspace/; revision=1183978
We don't need to do this every time we bind the texture to a GL context,
even with strict binding.
svn path=/trunk/KDE/kdebase/workspace/; revision=1182198
For Software Rasterizer we never ever want to have OpenGL compositing.
No matter how many config options the user sets it has to be disabled.
Though falling back to XRender makes sense in the case of software
rasterization.
svn path=/trunk/KDE/kdebase/workspace/; revision=1176787
into KWin's global namespace. Morever None already kind of clashes with X's None.
CCMAIL: kde@martin-graesslin.com
svn path=/trunk/KDE/kdebase/workspace/; revision=1170588
This allows an effect to fade between old and new text/icon. As an example it's added to CoverSwitch.
Currently only supported in OpenGL. XRender might be added, but I'm missing an idea for an effect to add it.
Most effects using EffectFrame require OpenGL anyway.
svn path=/trunk/KDE/kdebase/workspace/; revision=1160252
I missed this line in my previous change to disable the fallback which made the fallback happen nevertheless.
svn path=/trunk/KDE/kdebase/workspace/; revision=1157978
So it is more consistent (in KDE newspeak "elegant") with other selections and as a plus we get rid of all the custom rendering code in boxswitch.
svn path=/trunk/KDE/kdebase/workspace/; revision=1155051
Some effects (boxswitch and flipswitch) still need to be changed to not set the icon in each frame.
svn path=/trunk/KDE/kdebase/workspace/; revision=1152367
Rendering of the EffectFrame is moved into the scene as Scene::EffectFrame with a concrete implementation in SceneXrender and SceneOpenGL.
A factory method for an EffectFrame is added to the EffectsHandler, which is used by the effects.
Next step: pass the EffectFrame through all effects, so that effects can transform, blur, invert whatever it.
svn path=/trunk/KDE/kdebase/workspace/; revision=1151271
With Intel drivers currently the self check at KWin startup fails (no idea why) and KWin falls back to XRender. This is probably an explanation for all the complaints about slow kwin in 4.5 and the missing effects. So let's fail and make it possible to restart compositing via systemsettings and alt+shift+f12.
Nevertheless it would be nice to fix the the failing selfcheck...
svn path=/trunk/KDE/kdebase/workspace/; revision=1148315
to work correctly but as doing it there defeats the purpose of moving
the code to begin with there's no point in moving it.
BUG: 226049
svn path=/trunk/KDE/kdebase/workspace/; revision=1088054
functions and share the value with the KCM; Fallback to XRender
compositing if OpenGL fails to work correctly; Rearrange setting order
in options.h slightly and fix variable names
svn path=/trunk/KDE/kdebase/workspace/; revision=1079919
As this is a bigger commit I will wait with backporting to 4.3 for something about two or three weeks and will only backport if nobody yells.
BUG: 201780
svn path=/trunk/KDE/kdebase/workspace/; revision=1004096
This could be the solution to the performance regression when starting effects at activation change.
CCBUG: 191694
svn path=/trunk/KDE/kdebase/workspace/; revision=969215
at the same time (in other words, only when activating compositing using the kcm).
Currently selfcheck causes bad flicker (due to X mapping the overlay window
for too long?) which looks bad during KDE startup. With this patch, KDE startup
is without any flicker.
svn path=/trunk/KDE/kdebase/workspace/; revision=923842
(i.e. currently it allows to enable compositing even if self-check fails).
Not recommended of course, and it's be still nice to get self-check work
reliably.
CCBUG: 170085
svn path=/trunk/KDE/kdebase/workspace/; revision=860196
second test fails for some reason with BadAlloc in glXCreatePixmap().
Maybe nvidia bug, but could be also some hidden KWin bug (according
to GLX docs, glXCreatePixmap() can give BadAlloc only when it can't
allocate, which is nonsense here, but glXCreateWindow() says that
BadAlloc may mean calling it twice on the same window, so maybe
here it's twice with the same pixmap - I don't see where the bug
could be though).
svn path=/trunk/KDE/kdebase/workspace/; revision=857141
really works by simply trying to do it and test the result - create a small
testing window with known content, do the same with it like with normal
windows, grab the screen contents, compare with the original, doesn't match? -> fail.
It still would be nice to have something similar for performance.
svn path=/trunk/KDE/kdebase/workspace/; revision=854549
Therefore zScale, zTranslate and new RotationData are added to ScreenPaintData and WindowPaintData. So it is possible to define zTranslation and rotations without using OpenGL directly. The change only affects OpenGL compositing. XRender is not changed.
svn path=/trunk/KDE/kdebase/workspace/; revision=842018
actually needs to flush the output to the screen. Avoids windows
temporarily disappearing during KDE startup or similar visual glitches.
svn path=/trunk/KDE/kdebase/workspace/; revision=806387
geometry actually stays the same. Avoids large number of rebinds (with no
strict binding) with the launch feedback icon.
svn path=/trunk/KDE/kdebase/workspace/; revision=787948
Also slightly redo the #define's for effects, now it's:
- #ifdef KWIN_HAVE_COMPOSITING to check whether there's any compositing support at all
- #ifdef KWIN_HAVE_OPENGL_COMPOSITING to check for OpenGL-based compositing
- #ifdef KWIN_HAVE_XRENDER_COMPOSITING the same for XRender
CCMAIL: kwin@kde.org
svn path=/trunk/KDE/kdebase/workspace/; revision=749628
being v2+ (right now it says just GPL, which according to GPL itself
means any GPL). Decoration clients will come later.
CCMAIL: kwin@kde.org
svn path=/trunk/KDE/kdebase/workspace/; revision=742302
but whatever) default to ARGB visual if available, it's better to turn off
compositing if no GLX visual is found for depth 32.
CCBUG: 152595
svn path=/trunk/KDE/kdebase/workspace/; revision=739261