Move this to a separate function to better accommodate changes in the
following commit.
Signed-off-by: Ander Conselvan de Oliveira <ander.conselvan.de.oliveira@intel.com>
The files in question are copyright Benjamin Franzke (who agrees),
Intel Corporation, Red Hat and myself. On behalf of Red Hat,
Richard Fontana says:
"Therefore, to the extent that Red Hat, Inc. has any copyright
interest in the files you cited as of this date (compositor-drm.c,
compositor.c, compositor.h, screenshooter.c in
http://cgit.freedesktop.org/wayland/wayland-demos/tree/compositor),
Red Hat hereby elects to apply the CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain
Dedication to such copyrighted material. See:
http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/legalcode .
Thanks,
Richard E. Fontana
Open Source Licensing and Patent Counsel
Red Hat, Inc."
The compositor was never actually calling the output backend to turn off
the hardware cursor when the screen begins fading. This would result in
a stuck hardware cursor and movable software cursor for the duration of
the fade/unfade.
Signed-off-by: Matt Roper <matthew.d.roper@intel.com>
Adds a general wlsc_compositor_shutdown() function that all output
backends call when shutting down. wlsc_compositor_shutdown() will call
a new 'destroy' method of each output to perform backend-specific
cleanup (e.g., turning off the hardware cursor in the DRM compositor).
Signed-off-by: Matt Roper <matthew.d.roper@intel.com>
texture_region was getting a trash value for computing. I don't
understand how we couldn't see any artifact on surface output in such
case.
Signed-off-by: Tiago Vignatti <tiago.vignatti@intel.com>
This reverts cde9bfc805. We need to damage the
area covered by the old surface when attaching a new buffer. The new surface
area will be damaged by the client.