You can bet on reverting makes people speed up the process in fixing it.
Revert the revert here now that Cedric fixed it in eina.
This reverts commit 875e7cf74d.
This patch brings in constant E crash for me. It seems to be timing
related which somehow leads to a mem corruption. Revert it for now
to allow people using E while Cedric looks into it.
This reverts commit 12d34309c7.
This is really useful to track down a leak of a memory piece allocated by an
eet_data function. If you know the size of the leaked structure (valgrind
give you the total allocated size and the number of structure in it, so you
need to divide before having the right number), you just need to do :
EINA_LOG_LEVELS=eet:3 my_app 2>&1 | grep the_size
And there will be very few line matching reducing what you should be looking at.
We need the wayland-scanner program to auto-generate the
subsurface protocol source files from subsurface.xml
Signed-off-by: U. Artie Eoff <ullysses.a.eoff@intel.com>
this makes curl support a pure runtime-only thing. libcurl is loaded by
eina_module (dlopen/dlsym) when curl is actually first needed (when a
url connection/object is created). this means that ecore-con has no
link or compile dependencies on curl, only runtime, AND this saves
memory (due to curl inits using apparently a chunk of private pages).
so this saves memory and moves the dependency to runtime (though still
consider libcurl a dependency of efl - but like a binary executed,
it's at runtime).
Wayland subsurfaces can be used as video surfaces too, similarly to
Ecore_X windows. However, they support a different set of features. Some
of them, like subsurface clipping and scaling, might be added in the
future, but so far we must work with what we have.
This commit allows to set an enum bitfield to the Video_Surface, with
the default value being one that will keep the same behavior as before,
for Ecore_X window. Thus, backward compatibility should not be broken.
It's possible to inform Evas that the surface in question is not able to
resize or scale, or that it's above or below the original canvas
surface. This allows Evas to show the surface itself, or use a buffer of
pixels instead, when the capabilities are not available.
If we are running on async render, some operations must be delayed, so
they will happen at the same time that the canvas rendering result gets
updated on the window/surface.
So current order is :
- __builtin_bswap*() for compiler that provide it
- _byteswap_*() for MSVC
- bswap_*() for older Linux and some BSD
- own C code when everything else fall appart.
The reason for this order is that the builtin will always generate
the best assembly possible. On my system bswap_*() are not changing
in all version to the best solution as they are almost equivalent to
the C macro.
I'm sorry, but those kind of commit messages are unacceptable for code
I'm the only maintainer of. It's bad enough that to have them in the
project in general, but this I won't accept.
I wanted to review this commit, but the lack of explanation about what
you are trying to fix and why you think this is the good fix prevents me
from doing my job. However, without really looking too much into it,
this commit looks wrong. evas_textblock_cursor_format_is_visible_get
should verify there's a format node...
Please come up with a better commit message and re-commit.
This reverts commit fe33aa7408.
This one fix size of the object that didn't take into account the style
of the text since we added the support of ellipsis in Evas. It also
correctly detect when we insert an ellipsis in the text to relayout
properly on resize.