this used to be a marker for places where x11 functionality was needed,
but this has been simplified with the removal of wayland-only in configure
and so it is no longer needed
the dialog for now is simple and lets you just raw edit the properties
per screen in a dialog. nothing fancy. not user firendly. but it works.
the randr core has been totally rewritten and tested against a range
of drivers and setups before even getting a commit. it works solidly
and configures screens reliably now. drivers tested:
nvidia
intel
radeon
some drivers still are unreliable in terms of delivering plug/unplug
events for outputs (both intel and radeon are flakey - nvidia is solid
and reliable). so to fix this there is now a screen redo action you
can bind to a hotkey or something and have e re-evaluate current
screen setup and apply ny pending config if needed.
also to make reconfiguring prettier the screen is faded to black
first, then configured, then faded back in. some drivers work
flawlessly with this, others still flicker some garbage.
i admit - i haven't tested nouveau, but my general take on this is the
randr code is now in far better shape than where it was (minus pretty
and easy dialog). the dialog can be done next, but i'd like to get the
core in now for more testing.
@fix
* try to clear up build system for separating out ecore-x
* add #ifdefs for lots of ecore-x stuff
* break out some internal e wl functions for reuse in api
* store wl surface buffers as an inlist
* add protocol-specific client compositor data
** move lots of X client attributes here
* add pixmap type checks to a number of X-specific things, such as grabinput, to block them for non-X clients
* rearrange startup order to work with wayland
* move X screensaver code to e_comp_x
* flag modules still requiring X with -DNEED_X
this is the correct way to write a build system. one toplevel Makefile.am with the rest of the directories having include Makefile.mk files.
additional authors:
Iván Briano <ivan.briano@intel.com>