RandR 1.1 clients expect the size fields in this event to be the unrotated
dimensions of the screen. This behavior is "weird", but that's the way the old
code worked so we need to be bug-compatible with it.
Now, fbcmap_mi.c contains the fb functions which just wrap mi functions.
Previously, these were in fbcmap.c and compiled when XFree86Server was defined.
Now, clients of fbcmap should either use fbcmap.c or fbcmap_mi.c and not worry
about setting the XFree86Server symbol.
Erasing this variable causes some outputs (SDVO on intel) to fail
to be correctly reset at server reset time.
(cherry picked from commit 56262a4ee943f328d089a8eb4aa70b9a4bd5d135)
It seems that the changes to X input exposed a problem that wasn't detected
before. The axis clipping code in GetPointerEvents() uses those limits to
constrain the pointer's coordinate range. The max was zero so the pointer
couldn't move.
Use new dmxCoreMotion2() function which enqueues motion events with
GetPointerEvents()/mieqEnqueue().
The clipAxis() code in GetPointerEvents() is causing some grief. The
limits seem to have always been (0,0) according to the original calls
to InitValuatorAxisStruct() in dmxinputinit.c.
Terrible hack for now: Call InitValuatorAxisStruct() with hard-coded max
values of 1280 (my screen width).
Use newly added XMesaCopyContext() and drop the GlxSetRenderTables() call
for Xgl, as this is now done inside XMesaForceCurrent(). This leaves xmesaP.h
but only for the declarations of the three XMesa/XFree86 functions. Also,
GlxSetRenderTables() stays but is only used in hw/xgl/glxext/ .
Also drop xf86glxint.h, no longer used.
Depends on mesa commit 7439a36785b6a2783e80a40a96c09db8f56dc2bc of 2007-03-30.
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.