We regularily need to flush many rectangles, so instead of making many
expensive ioctl() calls to the framebuffer driver, collect the
rectangles and only make one call. And if we have too many rectangles
then it may be cheaper to just update the entire region, in which case
we simply convert them all into a union and just flush that one
rectangle instead.
This enables rendering of mixed-scale screen layouts with e.g. high
resolution cursors and window button icons on high-dpi screens while
using lower resolution bitmaps on regular screens.
This sets the stage so that DisplaySettings can configure the screen
layout and set various screen resolutions in one go. It also allows
for an easy "atomic" revert of the previous settings.
This allows WindowServer to use multiple framebuffer devices and
compose the desktop with any arbitrary layout. Currently, it is assumed
that it is configured contiguous and non-overlapping, but this should
eventually be enforced.
To make rendering efficient, each window now also tracks on which
screens it needs to be rendered. This way we don't have to iterate all
the windows for each screen but instead use the same rendering loop and
then only render to the screen (or screens) that the window actually
uses.
This commit unifies methods and method/param names between the above
classes, as well as adds [[nodiscard]] and ALWAYS_INLINE where
appropriate. It also renamed the various move_by methods to
translate_by, as that more closely matches the transformation
terminology.
SPDX License Identifiers are a more compact / standardized
way of representing file license information.
See: https://spdx.dev/resources/use/#identifiers
This was done with the `ambr` search and replace tool.
ambr --no-parent-ignore --key-from-file --rep-from-file key.txt rep.txt *
(...and ASSERT_NOT_REACHED => VERIFY_NOT_REACHED)
Since all of these checks are done in release builds as well,
let's rename them to VERIFY to prevent confusion, as everyone is
used to assertions being compiled out in release.
We can introduce a new ASSERT macro that is specifically for debug
checks, but I'm doing this wholesale conversion first since we've
accumulated thousands of these already, and it's not immediately
obvious which ones are suitable for ASSERT.
This was done with the help of several scripts, I dump them here to
easily find them later:
awk '/#ifdef/ { print "#cmakedefine01 "$2 }' AK/Debug.h.in
for debug_macro in $(awk '/#ifdef/ { print $2 }' AK/Debug.h.in)
do
find . \( -name '*.cpp' -o -name '*.h' -o -name '*.in' \) -not -path './Toolchain/*' -not -path './Build/*' -exec sed -i -E 's/#ifdef '$debug_macro'/#if '$debug_macro'/' {} \;
done
# Remember to remove WRAPPER_GERNERATOR_DEBUG from the list.
awk '/#cmake/ { print "set("$2" ON)" }' AK/Debug.h.in
Now, `chres 640 480 2` can set the UI to HighDPI 640x480 at runtime. A
real GUI for changing the display factor will come later.
(`chres 640 480 2` followed by `chres 1280 960` is very fast since
we don't have to re-allocate the framebuffer since both modes use
the exact same number of physical pixels.)
Almost all logic stays in "logical" (unscaled coordinates), which
means the patch is small and things like DnD, window moving and
resizing, menu handling, menuapplets, etc all work without changes.
Screen knows about phyiscal coordinates and mouse handling internally is
in physical coordinates (so that two 1 pixel movements in succession can
translate to one 1 logical coordinate mouse movement -- only a single
event is sent in this case, on the 2nd moved pixel).
Compositor also knows about physical pixels for its backbuffers. This is
a temporary state -- in a follow-up, I'll try to let Bitmaps know about
their intrinsic scale, then Compositor won't have to know about pixels
any longer. Most of Compositor's logic stays in view units, just
blitting to and from back buffers and the cursor save buffer has to be
done in pixels. The back buffer Painter gets a scale applied which
transparently handles all drawing. (But since the backbuffer and cursor
save buffer are also HighDPI, they currently need to be drawn using a
hack temporary unscaled Painter object. This will also go away once
Bitmaps know about their intrinsic scale.)
With this, editing WindowServer.ini to say
Width=800
Height=600
ScaleFactor=2
and booting brings up a fully-functional HighDPI UI.
(Except for minimizing windows, which will crash the window server
until #4932 is merged. And I didn't test the window switcher since the
win-tab shortcut doesn't work on my system.) It's all pixel-scaled,
but it looks pretty decent :^)