over to new system.
Need to update documentation and address some remaining vestiges of
old system such as CursorRec structure, fb "offman" structure, and
FontRec privates.
Debian bug #272368http://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=272368
In certain locales, some characters from some TrueType fonts were not
appearing in the Xprint postscript output due to the font not being
identified in the postscript output.
Composite's automatic redirection is a more general mechanism than the
ad-hoc BS machinery, so it's much prettier to implement the one in terms
of the other. Composite now wraps ChangeWindowAttributes and activates
automatic redirection for windows with backing store requested. The old
backing store infrastructure is completely gutted: ABI-visible structures
retain the function pointers, but they never get called, and all the
open-coded conditionals throughout the DIX layer to implement BS are gone.
Note that this is still not a strictly complete implementation of backing
store, since Composite will throw the bits away on unmap and therefore
WhenMapped and Always hints are equivalent.
xf86RandR12ScreenSetSize must protect calls to EnableDisableFBAccess with
suitable vtSema checks to avoid invoking driver code while the X server is
inactive.
The multi-crtc cursor code in hw/xfree86/modes holds a reference to the
current cursor. This reference must be correctly ref counted so the cursor
is not freed out from underneath this code.
This is where they should have been in the first place. All the rest of
the code in the server defines such things in the source files, not the
headers.
A bunch of CFLAGS had gone missing, so the build failed with errors like:
../../../../../hw/xfree86/os-support/linux/lnx_ev56.c:7:19: error: input.h: No such file or directory
../../../../../hw/xfree86/os-support/linux/lnx_ev56.c:8:24: error: scrnintstr.h: No such file or directory
As a result, we can remove the quirks that existed to flip the bits back around
for us. This is not confirmed in all cases due to lack of bugs containing EDID
blocks associated with the quirks, but is likely true.
I exported the evdev driver to Xephyr server. I'm running it using something
like:
$ ./hw/kdrive/ephyr/Xephyr :1 -mouse evdev,,device=/dev/input/event4 -keybd \
evdev,,device=/dev/input/event1,xkbmodel=abnt2,xkblayout=br
It also closes /#5668.
and the Xephyr virtual mouse keeps alive. With this patch the semantic changes
turning '-pointer' && 'Xephyr virtual mouse' always false.
Now we can open a device pointer and pass its options in Xephyr's command line
without having other pointer unused.
The outport is most likely unnecessary on any currently used hardware,
the byte copy is necessary from what I know on IA64 and friends so leave it.
Add a new API entry point which lets a driver select the old behaviour if
such a needs is ever found.
This gives me ~20% speed up on startup on 945 hardware.