RandR 1.1 has a physical size for each mode. It used to be that the DIX would
remember these modes and pass them back up to the DDX when changing the screen
configuration. The DDX uses RR_GET_MODE_MM to query the driver for the physical
dimensions of the screen, allowing it to preserve the DPI.
With RandR 1.2, the physical dimensions are stored as part of the output, rather
than per mode. The DIX only uses the sizes passed in from the DDX to select the
mode pool for the "default" output, and forgets the physical sizes. Then, when
reconfiguring the screen, it makes up a new RRScreenSizeRec using the dimensions
from the output, screwing up the DPI.
This change works around this problem by ignoring the DIX and querying the real
size from the driver.
This reverts commit 76576c87b0.
which was an incorrect revert of previous ABI bumps. Those
responsible for the accidental ABI bumps in both directions
have all been sacked.
This allows xf86-input-mouse to build again, for example.
Spiritual revert of 1fa4de80fc. Intel's C
compiler claims to be gcc-compatible; if they're not defining the same
macros as gcc then that's their bug, not ours. Even if we were to do
this aliasing we should do it once and for all in servermd.h.
The problem happens if Monitor/Card combo doesn't provide EDID info,
and the XFree86-VidModeExtension extension is used.
Signed-off-by: Peter Hutterer <peter@cs.unisa.edu.au>
During GetPointerEvents (and others), we need to access the last coordinates
posted for this device from the driver (not as posted to the client!). Lastx/y
is ok if we only have two axes, but with more complex devices we also need to
transition between all other axes.
ABI break, recompile your input drivers.
Conflicts:
Xext/xprint.c (removed in master)
config/hal.c
dix/main.c
hw/kdrive/ati/ati_cursor.c (removed in master)
hw/kdrive/i810/i810_cursor.c (removed in master)
hw/xprint/ddxInit.c (removed in master)
xkb/ddxLoad.c
Missing parameter caused event processing to go nuts when checking valuators.
X.Org Bug 15936 <http://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=15936>
Signed-off-by: Peter Hutterer <peter@cs.unisa.edu.au>
In DeleteInputDeviceRequest, leave the conf_idev (which is shared with
xf86ConfigLayout.input) alone for devices that were specified in the
ServerLayout section of the config file. This way, in the next server
generation we are left with what was the original config and can thus re-init
the devices.
This is an addon to 6d22a9615a, an attempt to
fix Bug 14418.
X.Org Bug 15645 <https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=15645>
X.Org Bug 14418 <https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=15645>
The previous check works in the master-branch, but doesn't work with MPX. We
actually copy the SD's information into the MDs public.devicePrivate, so we
need to explicitly check whether a device is a MD before freeing the module.
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>
Some pointer devices send key events [1], blindly getting the paired device
crashes the server. So let's check if the device is a pointer before we try to
get the paired device.
[1] The MS Wireless Optical Desktop 2000's multimedia keys are sent through
the pointer device, not through the keyboard device.
Get rid of glcontextmodes.[ch] from build, rename __GlcontextModes to
__GLXcontext. Drop all #includes of glcontextmodes.h and glcore.h.
Drop the DRI context modes extension.
Add protocol code to DRI2 module and load DRI2 extension by default.