Only one use of <localfield> remained, for a list length expression in
xv.xml. List length parameters that don't actually appear in the
protocol should be left implicit: if no length expression is given, then
a localfield will be automatically created by c-client.xsl.
Specifically, fixes these two warnings which were emitted for every
generated source file:
* Warning: end of file while inside a group
* Warning: group XCB_BigRequests_API already documented. Skipping documentation.
Don't override the default htmldir with an unquoted copy.
Don't suppress `make` echoing on Doxygen commands.
Ensure the tutorial is always installed even if Doxygen isn't
available.
Take better advantage of the automake installation infrastructure.
check 0.9.4 is now required to build XCB's unit tests.
The version that we were requiring was not actually new enough to let
our unit tests compile, and the AM_PATH_CHECK macro is now considered
deprecated. We know that versions of check using pkg-config are new
enough to work, and the check dependency was optional anyway, so we've
dropped support for older versions.
Hard coding the opcode numbers in the function just makes it harder to figure
out what's going on, but much more to the point, not defining the opcodes in
the header makes it impossible to use the generated headers instead of the
x11proto headers in the server.
The name I settled on is very simple, for an extension by the name of xconf,
and a request by the name of list_devices, we get XCB_XCONF_LIST_DEVICES. If
this somehow causes problems, we can probably add a _OP somewhere in there,
but.
Acked-by: Jamey Sharp <jamey@minilop.net>
Closes: #8641
The initial implementation of Plan 7 dumped all X errors into the event
queue, because the record of a pending reply was pruned too early if an
error occurred in place of the expected reply.
Since extensions no longer provide type-specific XID-generation functions,
xcb_generate_id now forms part of the xcb client API, rather than the
extension API; move it from xcbext.h to xcb.h accordingly.
After positive feedback from several people, we have decided to remove the XID
wrapper structures that attempted to provide C type safety, and replace them
with uint32_t typedefs. Feedback has indicated that these type-safety hacks
generated more trouble than help.
We will bump the libxcb soname at the next release.
We don't want to have to change the libxcb soname if we later manage to remove
the Xlib compatibility functions, and nothing except Xlib should ever use
them, so split them into a separate library.