By adding a new output callback, ->get_crtc, xf86SetDesiredModes is able to
avoid turning off outputs & CRTCs if the current output<->CRTC mappings are the
same as the desired configuration. This helps avoid flickering displays at
startup time, which speeds things up a little and looks better.
In order to report accurate values to users of the RandR property interface,
it's sometimes necessary to ask the driver to update the value (for example
when backlight brightness changes without the server's knowledge, due to hotkey
events or direct sysfs banging).
This patch wires up the core server code with a new xf86CrtcFuncs callback,
get_property, to allow for this.
The new code is available under the RANDR_13_INTERFACE define, which in turn
depends on the RANDR_12_INTERFACE code.
Upon recreation of the RandR internal data structures in RRCrtcNotify() the
crtc of an output could be NULLed if the crtc was shared (cloned) between two
outputs and one of them got another crtc assigned.
Previous version only moved the VCP, causing "bogus pointer events" lateron.
Now we run through the device list, updating each pointer separately if
necessary.
Also stick a big warning into RRPointerMoved, not sure what device we need to
work on here.
Clients expect any Xinerama-enabled screen to report at least one
monitor, but with RandR, there may not be any enabled crtcs. In this case,
tell the client that Xinerama is not active.
The timestamp transferred in the X protocol is a 32-bit number of
milliseconds.
The timestamp stored in the server is a structure that contains two fields:
months (!) and milliseconds.
When the server passes the config timestamp to the client, it discards the
months part and sends only the milliseconds part.
When the server receives the config timestamp from the client, it tries to
guess the "months" part by looking at the current time and then maybe adding
or
subtracting one. The guess is wrong after the server has been running long
enough (several hours).
I have added two ErrorF calls around the 'if' statement that returns
RRSetConfigInvalidConfigTimestamp in randr/randr.c and my Xorg.0.log has
this:
randr request got good config time: 0:-2103495671
for the first few successful xrandr calls, and
randr request failed with RRSetConfigInvalidConfigTime: client passed
1:-2103495671, server has 0:-2103495671
when it fails. The server has been running for 8 and a half hours.
The obvious fix would be to ignore the months field and only compare the
milliseconds.
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.
RRFirstOutput returns the first active output, which won't be set until
after RRScanOldConfig is finished running. Instead, just use the first
output (which is the only output present with an old driver, after all).
Set the new randr crtc of the output before the output change notification is
delivered to the clients.
Remove RROutputSetCrtc as it is not really necessary. All we have to do is set
the output's crtc on RRCrtcNotify
When checking how to validate the selected mode and position against the
current screen size, the test against 90/270 rotation did not mask out
reflection, so that when reflection was specified, the 90/270 test would
never succeed. This caused incorrect bounds checking and would return
an error to the user instead of rotating the screen.