This cleans up server Makefile.ams a little bit, but also means that people
messing with configure.ac need to be careful with whether they put libraries
in the _LIBS or _SYS_LIBS targets. Hopefully the comment in configure.ac will
clarify the issues.
Note that pciaccess doesn't yet have Net/OpenBSD support, but the relevant
code should go there instead of disconnected code in the X Server.
While here, remove the now-disabled INCLUDE_XF86_NO_DOMAIN from the headers,
and un-disable xf8StdAccResFromOS for those OSes without domain support which
will need it.
Add support for HAL-based hotplugging, in which we just get the list of
input devices and properties from HAL. Requires an FDI which is not yet
in mainline HAL.
Make sure the font path is always 'built-ins' when we use built-in fonts,
rather than having it as a fixed path for a while, then clobbering it
halfway through startup.
Break up D-Bus into two components: a D-Bus core that can be used by any
part of the server (for the moment, just the D-Bus hotplug API, and the
forthcoming HAL hotplug API), and the old D-Bus hotplug API.
Not sure why these are conditionals, anyway. This one really needs
revisiting, but at least causes configure, rather than the compilation,
to bomb out.
This patch changes the semantics of manual redirect windows so that they no
longer affect the clip list of their parent. Doing this means the parent can
draw to the area covered by the child without using IncludeInferiors. More
importantly, this also means that the parent receives expose events when
that region is damaged by other actions.
It causes the compiler to treat it as an octal constant instead of decimal as
intended, which could even cause a build failure in the cases of 08 and 09.
Thanks to Clark Rawlins for pointing out the problem.
Xprt links libfb, which now uses pixman. Update configure.ac to
require module $PIXMAN for XPRINT.
Also, use $(top_builddir) to reference libfb.la and other local
libraries, rather than using the relative reference ../..
Allow the location of the SERVERCONFIGdir variable to be defined at
compile-time. This allows us to specify where the security policy will be
located (Debian uses this to put it in /etc). The default is to the
previous location.
Additionally, protect libcw setup behind checks for Render, to avoid
segfaulting if Render isn't available (xnest).
The previous setup was an ABI-preserving dance, which is better nuked now.
Now, anything that needs libcw must explicitly initialize it, and
miDisableCompositeWrapper (previously only called by EXA and presumably binary
drivers) is gone.