SDL_Vulkan_GetDrawableSize() doesn't always return a size which is
within the Vulkan swapchain's allowed image extent range.
(This happens on X11 a lot when resizing, which is bug #3287)
Clamp the value we get back from SDL_Vulkan_GetDrawableSize() to this
range. Given the range usually is just a single value, this is almost
always equivalent to just using the min or max image extent, but this
seems logically most correct.
Configure events from compositors have an extremely annoying habit of giving us
completely bogus sizes, from all sorts of places. Thankfully, the protocol
gives us the ability to completely ignore the width/height and just stick with
what we know, so for all windows that are not meant to be resized, pretend we
never even got the width/height at all, the compositor is required to respect
our dimensions whether they match configure's suggestion or not.
Otherwise only the display resolution is changed, but the SDL window size
(and for example the window-surface size) aren't adjusted accordingly
and thus don't fill the whole screen.
See #3313
.. and maybe other platforms as well (though X11 was not affected)?
The issue was that passing a higher resolution than the current desktop
resolution to SDL_CreateWindow() with SDL_WINDOW_FULLSCREEN didn't switch
to that resolution (even though it did switch to lower resolutions).
When creating a fullscreen window, window->fullscreen wasn't even set
at all (only zeroed out), setting it only happened if the user explicitly
called SDL_SetWindowDisplayMode(). So without that, SDL_CreateWindow()
-> SDL_UpdateFullscreenMode() -> SDL_GetWindowDisplayMode() used the
resolution from window->windowed.w/h which were limited to the desktop size
due to some weird combination of WIN_AdjustWindowRectWithStyle() and
WIN_WindowProc() being called after a call to SetWindowPos().
fixes#3313
This prevents a race if two threads that need d-bus try to init it at the
same time. Note that SDL_Init will likely handle this from a single thread
at startup, but there are places outside of init where one might trigger
D-Bus init, like setting thread priority (a common first thing for a new
thread to do) resulting in SDL trying to use RTKit.
Fixes#4587.
This reintroduces the fix from 0e16ee8330, but just marks
the viewport state as dirty after a clear that needs to expand the
viewport to fill the render target, as we'll need to also reset
the orthographic projection state elsewhere, and that won't
happen if we clear the dirty flag here.
Fixes#4210.
(again.)
(...sorry...!)
- Fixed the markdown.
- Code can now be exited by pressing ESC.
- Cleans up and returns from main()
- Mushed all the `if (x) { return 0; }` blocks into else ifs.
The LINKER variable is set in configure.ac as either 'CC' or 'CXX'
where it is then passed to the created Makefile. This fails with
slibtool which can't find the 'CC' file and can be fixed by correctly
setting the LINKER variable to an actual Makefile variable like '$(CC)'
or '$(CXX)' instead. Presumably GNU libtool does some magic here to
hide the issue.
The Renderer logical scaling code scales mouse coordinates, and needs to
take the window DPI into account on HIGHDPI windows. However, the
variable which tracks this, renderer->dpi_scale, is set once when the
renderer is created, and then not updated. In the event that the window
is moved to another screen, or the screen DPI otherwise changes, this
will be outdates, and potentially the coordinates will be all wrong.
So let's update the dpi_scale on the SIZE_CHANGED event: it's at least a
possibility that this will be issued on some OSes when DPI changes, and
it's otherwise already handled by SDL_Renderer's event filter.
The $(objects) directory (usually build/) may not have been created by
the time the wayland-scanner protocol files are being compiled. The
$(gen) directory is explicitly made with mkinstalldir, but the final
object file (and gcc dependency files) need to go into $(objects).
For whatever reason, this only ever seemed to occur if --disable-shared
was set.
Note that this commit doesn't regenerate ./configure, as there were a
few unexplained, unrelated differences my version of autoconf created,
as as an autotools novice, I didn't want to poke that bear just yet.
This hopefully should fix#3689