This extension provided bug-compatibility with pre-X11R6, but has been
stubbed out in our server since 2006 to return BadRequest when you actually
asked for it.
(cherry picked from commit 4e2c6dbabdbbaaca213fd08edd422de15d0900cc)
required because of commit 7c0709a736,
which made requestingClient in dix specific to Xprint only.
Add to XPRINT_LIBS in hw/xprint/Makefile.am in front of
$(XSERVER_LIBS) to override definitions in libdix.la for standard xservers.
Follows 571206832d (providing -DXPRINT
to xprint subdirs).
Note it may be possible to restructure the code so that
requestingClient is stored elsewhere than in dix. See discussions
following http://lists.freedesktop.org/archives/xorg/2008-March/033844.html
If this is done it may be possible to revert this commit (if not 571206...).
-DXPRINT had only been set for Xprt in hw/xprint/Makefile.am
After commit 7c0709a736 it is also
required for ps/PsArea.c and PsFonts.c to ensure ‘requestingClient’ is
defined, so make it a global Xprint definition in configure.ac.
(cherry picked from commit 28a6719fd486d9a9cecad0b057d9ea7c59c66055)
In some cases we can still do the copying in hardware even if the
dimensions of the pixmaps are out of range. This is true when the boxes
that we're to copy are all in the card's range.
I'm not sure this the complete proper solution, perhaps it should explicitly fill
in ever field.
This at least makes glxinfo on glcore return sensible information, it doesn't make
gears work yet though.
The DDX (xfree86 anyway) maintains its own device list in addition to the one
in the DIX. CloseDevice will only remove it from the DIX, not the DDX. If the
server then restarts (last client disconnects), the DDX devices are still
there, will be re-initialised, then the hal devices come in and are added too.
This repeats until we run out of device ids.
This also requires us to strdup() the default pointer/keyboard in
checkCoreInputDevices.
X.Org Bug 14418 <http://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=14418>
A few pieces of code were abusing this define for other purposes, which are
converted to #ifndef DEBUG instead. There should be no ABI consequences
to this change.
The rationale is that having the define in xorg-server.h also disables
assert() drivers, which is unexpected, and also difficult to avoid since
xorg-server.h is included in their config.h, and you can't put a #undef in
config.h. As for removing it from the server instead of moving it to an
internal header, we probably shouldn't have unnecessary assert()s in
critical server paths anyway, and if we do we could #define NDEBUG in the
specific cases needed.