This patch sets up the stage for similarly renaming compositor.h which will
justify this. That patch will be big, so moving timeline-object.h first makes
it easy to see the changes to the build and install directives.
This and all the following moves essentially break the API, so libweston major
is bumped.
Signed-off-by: Pekka Paalanen <pekka.paalanen@collabora.com>
This clarifies what is supposed to be the libweston code.
v2: screen-share.c is already in compositor/ instead.
Signed-off-by: Pekka Paalanen <pekka.paalanen@collabora.co.uk>
Reviewed-by: Yong Bakos <ybakos@humanoriented.com>
Acked-by: Daniel Stone <daniels@collabora.com>
Reviewed-by: Quentin Glidic <sardemff7+git@sardemff7.net>
Tested-by: Quentin Glidic <sardemff7+git@sardemff7.net>
Tested-by: Benoit Gschwind <gschwind@gnu-log.net>
Acked-by: Benoit Gschwind <gschwind@gnu-log.net>
[Pekka: rebased]
Logging is activated and deactivated with the debug key binding 't'.
When activated, it creates a new log file, where it records the events.
The log file contains events and detailed object information entries in
JSON format, and is meant to be parsed in sequence from beginning to the
end.
The emitted events are mostly related to the output repaint cycle, like
when repaint begins, is submitted to GPU, and when it completes on a
vblank. This is recorded per-output. Also some per-surface events are
recorded, including when surface damage is flushed.
To reduce the log size, events refer to objects like outputs and
surfaces by id numbers. Detailed object information is emitted only as
needed: on the first object occurrence, and afterwards only if
weston_timeline_object::force_refresh asks for it.
The detailed information for surfaces includes the string returned by
weston_surface::get_label. Therefore it is important to set
weston_timeline_object::force_refresh = 1 whenever the string would
change, so that the new details get recorded.
A rudimentary parser and SVG generator can be found at:
https://github.com/ppaalanen/wesgr
The timeline logs can answer questions including:
- How does the compositor repaint cycle work timing-wise?
- When was the vblank deadline missed?
- What is the latency from surface commit to showing the new content on
screen?
- How long does it take to process the scenegraph?
v2: weston_surface::get_description renamed to get_label.
v3: reafctor a bit into fprint_quoted_string().
Signed-off-by: Pekka Paalanen <pekka.paalanen@collabora.co.uk>
This is needed for XWayland surfaces with alpha channel, as X will be
sending crap in there that should be discarded.
This is currently done with a copy in the compositor, while we wait for
support in the VideoCore side.
Dispmanx is the prorietary display API on the Raspberry Pi, which
provides hardware compositing. Every visible surface is assigned a
Dispmanx element, and the hardware or firmware will do all compositing
onto screen. The API supports translation, scaling, flips, discrete
rotations in 90-degree steps, alpha channel on the surfaces, and
full-surface alpha on top.
Previously, Dispmanx capabilities were used via the weston_plane
mechanism, where surfaces were assigned to planes when possible, and
otherwise transparently falling back to GLESv2 compositing. Because we
have no way to use the same memory buffer as a GL texture and a Dispmanx
resource, we had to prepare for both. In the worst case, that means one GL
texture, and two (double-buffered case) Dispmanx resources, all the size
of a whole surface, for all surfaces. This was eating memory fast. To
make things worse (and less slow), the wl_shm buffer was kept around,
since it was copied to either a texture or a resource as needed. This
caused all clients to need two buffers. In a Dispmanx-only renderer, we
can drop the GL texture, and we can release wl_shm buffer immediately
after the first copy, so clients become effectively single-buffered. So
from the worst case of 5 buffers per surface, we go down to 3 or just
2 (single-buffered Dispmanx element, one wl_shm buffer in the client)
buffers per surface.
As this will replace the GL renderer on rpi, we cannot fall back to the
GLESv2 compositing anymore. We lose arbitrary surface rotation, but we
lose also the GL fallback, which caused glitches.
This patch depends on new RaspberryPi firmware. Older firmware may not
render ARGB surfaces correctly, solid color surfaces maybe cause a
performance hit, and the output may completely fail in case the firmware
does not fall back internal off-line compositing properly as needed.
This new rpi-renderer support surface translation and scaling, but not
rotation or transpose (not even in 90-deg steps). In theory, 90-deg step
surface rotation is possible to support. Output transformations are
supported, but flipped variants do not seem to work right.
As a detail, menus and other surfaces that are simply translated with
respect to another surface caused falling back to the GL renderer. The
rpi-renderer handles them directly.
This patch only adds the new renderer, but does not hook it up into use.
Signed-off-by: Pekka Paalanen <pekka.paalanen@collabora.co.uk>
This renderer could be used when there's no graphic accelerator available,
for example in (future) KMS and fbdev backends.
Signed-off-by: Vasily Khoruzhick <anarsoul@gmail.com>
weston-launch starts weston and provides mechanism
for weston to set/drop drm master, open a tty,
and read input devices without being root.
Execution is allowed for local-active sessions
or users in the group weston-launch.
This rename addresses a few problems around the split between core
Wayland and the wayland-demos repository.
1) Initially, we had one big repository with protocol code, sample
compositor and sample clients. We split that repository to make it
possible to implement the protocol without pulling in the sample/demo
code. At this point, the compositor is more than just a "demo" and
wayland-demos doesn't send the right message. The sample compositor
is a useful, self-contained project in it's own right, and we want to
move away from the "demos" label.
2) Another problem is that the wayland-demos compositor is often
called "the wayland compsitor", but it's really just one possible
compositor. Existing X11 compositors are expected to add Wayland
support and then gradually phase out/modularize the X11 support, for
example. Conversely, it's hard to talk about the wayland-demos
compositor specifically as opposed to, eg, the wayland protocol or a
wayland compositor in general.
We are also renaming the repo to weston, and the compositor
subdirectory to src/, to emphasize that the main "output" is the
compositor.
Besides the new header file, there's also a change in the main evdev creation
procedure for a more suggestive name (evdev_input_add_devices ->
evdev_input_create). There's no real functional changes in this commit.
Signed-off-by: Tiago Vignatti <tiago.vignatti@intel.com>